Is this a question or a statement?

You cannot run all services: http, https, rtmp, rtmpt, rtmps on the
same port 80 and 443, you can only achieve that by cheating with
subdomains + redirect/mod_proxy rules in Apache HTTPD.

Our configuration currently allows people to configure http + rtmp or
http + rtmpt on the same port.
However to practically achieve that you need Apache Webserver and
configured with mod_proxy.

Sebastian

2012/4/28 Alexei Fedotov <[email protected]>:
> We have really long discussion on the subject: why does our typical
> installation has two http servers - one is Apache jetty embedded into red5,
> and another is Apache Httpd which redirects traffic from port 80 to
> different ports of our product.
>
> I faced strong resistance convincing people that decreasing number of
> servers and ports is good. Of course the less servers we have, less
> installation work we have - why should we discuss it?
>
> Finally I noticed why two servers may be good for some people. This applies
> to the case when they want other http services like CMS or E-learning to
> run on the same machine. I was thinking mostly about our Openmeetings
> server farm, where are no advantages of keeping proxies, while each httpd
> costs 200 Mb per server.
>
> So the question is if we should keep using different ports in openmeetings.
> Are there any other reasons I missed?
>
> Concerning Maxim advice of using VPN - in my corporate life I don't even
> have an admin password or a right to run non-microsoft executables.
>
> Thanks.



-- 
Sebastian Wagner
https://twitter.com/#!/dead_lock
http://www.openmeetings.de
http://www.webbase-design.de
http://www.wagner-sebastian.com
[email protected]

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