That sounds like a job for a transparent reverse proxy. 
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reverse_proxy might be a good place to start. It 
links to several products in this category.

-- Mike

On 28 Feb 2011, at 08:55 , Anderson, Dr. Clifford wrote:

> Hi All,
>  
> We are planning to deploy a new application to our production server. On our 
> development server, we’ve been using port  8009 to host the HTTP server. On 
> our production server, we’d like to put this new application on 80. The only 
> problem is that we already have an application running on 80. It would be 
> problematic, on the one hand, to try to host both applications on 80 because 
> we have different error.xqy and rewrite.xqy handlers. We have also set up 
> different ML databases for each application. On the other hand, we do not 
> want users to be directed to a port other than 80, at least not knowingly. 
> (If we could hide the port from users, that would be OK).
>  
> Does anyone have any suggestions about how we might proceed? Is there a way 
> to filter incoming HTTP requests filter by host headers?
>  
> Thanks very much in advance,
> 
> Cliff
>  
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