Redirecting an internal path to a virtual host - apache

I have been working on a drupal test site for a while, which has a bunch of virtual hosts set up like this:
<VirtualHost *:80>
ServerAdmin email#example.com
DocumentRoot "/path/to/root"
ServerName testsite1.example.com
</VirtualHost>
I have been using a modified host file to view each of these test sites, along the lines of:
12.0.0.1 localhost
20.02.2.22 testsite1.example.com
20.02.2.22 testsite2.example.com
20.02.2.22 testsite3.example.com
This has worked fine, however now I need to send the sites over to some people remotely who are not technical enough to modify their own host files and see it the way I do.
Is there a way I could set up Apache so that the url "http://20.02.2.22/testsite1" would forward to testsite1.example.com internally? I am using Drupal, and the site setup needs to see the "testsite1.example.com" so that it can correctly choose the instance to select. I have been looking through apache rewrite, but I am a bit of a newb at this so any help is much appreciated.

testsite1.example.com will only be resolved on your machine, so you cannot redirect. You can set up proxy with mod_proxy. Hope this works for you:
<VirtualHost *:80>
ServerAdmin email#example.com
DocumentRoot "/path/to/root"
ServerName testsite1.example.com
ServerAlias 20.02.2.22
<Location /testsite1/>
ProxyPass http://testsite1.example.com/
</Location>
</VirtualHost>

The way I show my local test sites is a combination of Dynamic DNS and port-forwarding.
Internally, my Drupal site is at [my machine ip] or localhost.
I setup a free dynamic dns name to my IP and then on my router, accept incoming requests on port to route to [my machine ip]
That way, they can see yoursite.dyndns.com, but its looking at your local copy.

Why you just don't buy a new domain name and point it to your server IP address...
Or there are free domain solutions like:
http://www.dot.tk/en/index.html?lang=en
or
http://dyn.com/dns/
If you wanna buy new domain, i recommending you this one, cheap and quality service: http://server2.elite7hackers.us/recommend.php?site=godaddy

Related

Apache 2.4 multiple applications on separate IPs under single domain

I am a little lost on how to achieve the following...
I have a single domain name which is running a CMS # www.mywebsite.com
If a specific URL is given apache calls the other VM (different IPv4) running a shop. www.mywebsite.com/store
I've trawled through apache vhosts but nothing seemingly covers the above scenario if its even possible ...https://httpd.apache.org/docs/2.0/vhosts/examples.html
Any guidance would be very much appreciated.
If I understand your problem correctly, you could do this with mod_proxy.
For example:
<VirtualHost *:80>
ServerName www.mywebsite.com
ProxyPass /store/ http://store.local/
ProxyPassReverse /store/ http://store.local/
</VirtualHost>
You could use the IP address, server hostname or whatever in the proxy directives - store.local is just an example.
The mod_proxy documentation is extensive.

Apache different sites on different ports, still links to same site. Bind9 for domain names

I've been trying to create 3 different domains linking to 3 different sites on the same machine, 2 which works but the third on the different port links to the first page.
My apache config looks like this:
Listen 81
NameVirtualHost *:81
<VirtualHost *:80>
ServerName www.example.com
DocumentRoot /var/www/www
</VirtualHost>
<VirtualHost *:80>
ServerName www2.example.com
DocumentRoot /var/www/www2
</VirtualHost>
<VirtualHost *:81>
ServerName controlpanel.example.com
DocumentRoot /var/www/controlpanel
</VirtualHost>
I've used Bind9 to set up the domains.
www IN A 123.123.123.123
www2 IN A 123.123.123.123
controlpanel IN A 123.123.123.123
www and www2 works fine and shows the correct site, however controlpanel.example.com also links to the first www site. When I enter the port manualy on the ip, xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx:81, i get linked correctly. The thing is that I don't really know where I'm doing it wrong, this is the first time I'm trying anything like this. You got any ideas?
Im also running this on an old ubuntu 12.04 server.
Regarding where you're going in the comments for the previous answer:
You could add a port 80 virtualhost for controlpanel.example.com and put a single statement inside,
Redirect / http://controlpanel.example.com:81
The purpose of the ServerName is not to inform the browser what port your webserver is using. It's used for name-based virtualhosts and as a last resort for self-referential links (out of the box, self-referential links are generated with whatever the client already thought it was accessing via the Host: header)
But there is definitely something quite bizarre about your requirement. Usually the motivation is to not use custom ports, and if they are, to address the server with a low port and have the por remapped by some intermediary (load balancer, proxy).
If you want your third virtualhost to be simulataneously the defautl on port 81 and a name-based option on port 80:
Change
<VirtualHost *:81>
to
<VirtualHost *:80 *:81>
Apache finds the set of virtual hosts with the best IP:PORT based match first, then if NameVirtualHost also matches, starts looking at the ServerNames from that set.

Apache reverse proxy, one server, multiple domains

I am trying to manage 2 domains with one server (running proxmox with several CT), I am using reverse proxy but seems to be wrong.. here's my configuration:
Let's say we have the main server running proxmox where I managed IPTables to redirect port 80 to the port 80 of my first container (CT01) and port 8109 to port 80 of my second container (CT02).
While using the port in my browser, everything is working well, and I am able to reach each container.
I bought 2 domain names, one for my private server (CT01) and another one for a business server (CT02). I associated both of the domain to my server address, and while typing one or another of them I am redirected to CT01 (normal, browser is running the address to the default port).
So now I tried to use reverse proxy in order to redirect to the desired server (DomainA -> CT01, DomainB -> CT02), I created 2 files in /var/apache2/sites-available/ :
/var/apache2/sites-available/domainA.com:
<VirtualHost *:80>
ServerName domainA.com
DocumentRoot /var/www/
</VirtualHost>
/var/apache2/sites-available/domainB.com:
<VirtualHost *:80>
ServerName domainB.com
ProxyPreserveHost On
ProxyRequests On
ProxyPass / http://x.y.z.h:8109/
ProxyPassReverse / http://x.y.z.h:8109/
<Location />
Order allow,deny
Allow from all
</Location>
</VirtualHost>
Then I runned a2ensite domainA.com and a2ensite domainB.com. I restarted my apache service.
But nothing have changed: both my domainA and domainB redirect me to the same container (CT01).
Any idea?
What i may suggest is doing a new CT just to host a proxy (nginx for example) that will route the requests to one or the other site depending of the Host: field value of the HTTP request. This may be a little bit overkill if it's just for two sites, but when you want to have more, it can be very useful. Plus the NGinx can be used to cache, etc.
Let me know if you are interested. I know a tutorial that you may follow, but it's in french : http://blog.ganbaranai.fr/2013/08/il-etait-une-fois-proxmox-derriere-une-ip-unique/
Hope it helps.
Regards,

Running many websites on one server

This may be a duplicate question, but i have been thinking about it for long. I know, apache supports hosting many websites on a single server. But i want to know the implementation.
The server will have the single IP address. TCP is always port 80. Then how is it possible to run 10 different websites on a single machine. Also DNS, has one-to-one mapping.
I am thinking, probably some tweaking is done in HTTP protocol, but cant think of exact and best possible solution .
Thanks
You can add many VirtualHost entries in your Apache config as follows:
<VirtualHost *:80>
ServerName www.domain.tld
ServerAlias domain.tld *.domain.tld
DocumentRoot /www/domain
</VirtualHost>
<VirtualHost *:80>
ServerName www.otherdomain.tld
DocumentRoot /www/otherdomain
</VirtualHost>
This basically prompts Apache to respond differently, serving different documents based on which domain was requested.
More information can be found in the Apache docs: http://httpd.apache.org/docs/2.2/vhosts/name-based.html

IP based VirtualHost and Apache

I have this webserver that have an IP address xxx.xxx.xx.x, I also have a website I want to publish, but I do not have any domain for my website yet.
So in my httpd-vhosts.conf file I have this setting:
<VirtualHost xxx.xxx.xx.x>
ServerName xxx.xxx.xx.x
DocumentRoot "C:\Sites\mysite"
</VirtualHost>
And since I dont have a domain I really want to use the IP address to reach my site, but I have tried this and it does not work. I guess you HAVE to set a server name in ServerName as the title says.
Are there any ways for me to make my website public through my IP address, if yes how can I do this?
Try
NameVirtualHost *:80
<VirtualHost *:80>
DocumentRoot C:\Sites\mysite
ServerName xx.xx.xx.xx
</VirtualHost>
Remember to restart apache,
You may also need to add,
Listen xx.xx.xx.xx:80
If you only have the one website on this server, you don't need a virtual host. Just set the DocumentRoot correctly and away you go. Also make sure Apache is listening on all IP addresses (Listen 0.0.0.0:80.)
If that doesn't work for you, from your command prompt do:
telnet xx.xx.xx.xx 80
GET /
and see what you get back - you should get your website's default page.
This is not a programming question.
But anyway,
Set the VirtualHost to * rather than a specific IP address. I don't think you need the servername either then.