On 21/12/2011 19:43, Fuchs, Martin wrote:
Well, the squid-reverse package supports both ;-)

It’s a fully featured sqid2 WITH reverse ;-)

And Exchange-assistant ;-)


Just out of curiosity, what is the benefit of having a reverse proxy for Exchange? My understanding of a reverse proxy is to provide caching of static files, but surely a lot of the traffic on webmail interface is dynamic and/or personal to the particular user. The static parts of the interface would be relatively small files, and would quickly be cached at the user client end anyway.

We don't use Exchange, but I will be setting up a Horde webmail interface, and if there is some benefit to the reverse proxy that I'm missing here, maybe it will apply equally to Horde.


As another point, while we're on the topic of reverse proxies, can the reverse proxy pass on http requests to different servers based on the web address? We have several (virtual) servers for different uses, with addresses such as "svn.westcontrol.no" and "www.westcontrol.no". At the moment, all incoming port 80 traffic goes to a single common apache server, that passes the traffic on to the appropriate virtual server. If a reverse proxy on pfsense can handle that job, it will cut out an extra step.

mvh.,

David



_______________________________________________
List mailing list
[email protected]
http://lists.pfsense.org/mailman/listinfo/list

Reply via email to