Hi Graham ... You were absolutely correct with your assumption that mod_ssl in conjunction with mod_proxy can do reverse proxying to HTTPS backend server.
I appreciate your response and helpfulness... -- Regards. ______________________________________ Ilija Stankovski Infrastructure Technology Manager Mercury Information Technology Inc. Tel: (403) 233-0740 Fax: (403) 233-0725 E-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://www.psynch.com ______________________________________ __________________________________________________________________ "If you send me an e-mail request, and I do not respond within 3 hours, please send it again to '[EMAIL PROTECTED]' as I may be unavailable." __________________________________________________________________ On Tue, 8 Oct 2002, Graham Leggett wrote: > Ilija Stankovski wrote: > > > The problem is that mod_proxy can not get the page from the end point > > HTTPS server. This server can be Apache, IIS, iPlanet whatever. I don't > > see how mod_ssl or apache-ssl is responsible for the outgoing connection > > mod_proxy us suppose to handle. Please correct me if I am wrong ... > > My understanding is that mod_ssl in apache v1.3 patches mod_proxy to > enable it to do this: > > ProxyPass / https://backend.secure.server/ > > I am not 100% sure though, as I have never needed to use it. > > Is there a particular reason why you would want to do this? Secure > connections to backends can be expensive. > > Regards, > Graham > -- > ----------------------------------------- > [EMAIL PROTECTED] "There's a moon > over Bourbon Street > tonight..." >