Subject: Re: [Mailman-Users] Apache/Mailman with existing IIS
I am doing the same thing
with no issues
What problems are you running into? I didn't see your post
I am running all of my regular websites on IIS, windows 2003 servers
my mailing lists (for each domain that needs one) is run off
Hi,
Scot Condry wrote:
The firewall routes port 80 traffic to my windows 2000 server
So, you can see only windows server from outside world.
Stop port forwarding of the firewall and set up apache reverse
proxy. Read the friendly manual of apache httpd.
--
Tokio Kikuchi, tkikuchi@ is.kochi-u.ac.jp
At 12:32 PM -0700 2004/06/04, Scot Condry wrote:
Well I will definetly let people know if I figure it out. But now I
am thinking of just running Apache and hosting my previous web pages on
my Linux machine. It seems hard to believe that no one has tries to do
what I am doing before, hsoting
From: Bob Escher [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Fri 6/4/2004 1:06 PM
To: Scot Condry
Subject: Re: [Mailman-Users] Apache/Mailman with existing IIS
I am doing the same thing
with no issues
What problems are you running into? I didn't see your post
I am running all of my regular websites on IIS
At 10:03 PM -0700 2004/06/02, Scot Condry wrote:
So the only way to keep them both is to open up port 80 traffic on the
linux box / router as well??
I'm not sure. What you're trying to do is a little different,
and may not result in the same type of problems, or might result in
similar
At 5:05 PM -0700 2004/06/02, Scot Condry wrote:
My firewall (2 nics, the static IP and 192.168.1.1) sends port 80 traffic
to 192.168.1.105 my windows server. And I can tell IIS to redirect traffic
for http://linux.mydomain.com to a URL, google, cnn whatever... it works.
But I cant get it to
So the only way to keep them both is to open up port 80 traffic on the linux box /
router as well??
SC
From: Brad Knowles [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Wed 6/2/2004 6:17 PM
To: Scot Condry
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: [Mailman-Users] Apache