Hi!
Where can I find the nsunix and nsvhr module for aolserver 3.4.2? I
downloaded them for the 3.2 server but don't know where that was.
Thanks
Wolfgang
On 2003.01.04, Wolfgang Winkler [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Where can I find the nsunix and nsvhr module for aolserver 3.4.2? I
downloaded them for the 3.2 server but don't know where that was.
If someone could put them in the File List section of the AOLserver
SF project, that'd be good.
There are several 'virtual hosting' modules out there that will do the job.
Some are 100% C others are 100% Tcl, others are a mixture.
I'm using nssmartvh running on Win2K (development), as I couldn't get nsunix
and nsvhr to build very easily.
There's also 'vhost' 'tclvhr' and 'dqe' modules that
By now, you seem to have links to most of the major virtual domain
implementations for AOLserver; what you might not have is some data for
figuring out which to use. I can fill in a little...
Since AOLserver 3.x, virtual domains are no longer supported in AOLserver
(although they are coming back
Apparently in the latest version, nsvhr and nsunix work
out-of-the-box, although confirmation of this is sketchy.
They work flawlessly, out of the box, with 3.4.2 and 3.5.x.
Daniel P. Stasinski
Software Engineer
Mayor Pharmaceutical Laboratories
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
On 2003.01.03, Peter M. Jansson [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Apparently in the latest version, nsvhr and nsunix work
out-of-the-box, although confirmation of this is sketchy.
Indeed, they should work out-of-the-box on 3.5.x, and I can personally
attest to it, but nobody else has spoken up saying
On 2003.01.03, Daniel P. Stasinski [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Apparently in the latest version, nsvhr and nsunix work
out-of-the-box, although confirmation of this is sketchy.
They work flawlessly, out of the box, with 3.4.2 and 3.5.x.
Thanks to Jerry Asher and Dan Stasinski, of course.
On Friday, January 3, 2003, at 01:01 PM, Dossy wrote:
Doing reverse-proxy with nssock, you only see the IP address of your
reverse-proxy in your nslog ... with nsunix, you see the IP address of
the actual requesting client. This is important to some people, me
included.
Funny, I was just
Hello,
Here's another variant which could be useful. AOLserver 4.0 allows you to load the nssock driver outside a specific virtual server and then map to virtual servers via the Host header. As with old 2.x virtual servers, you can then have separate virtual server configs, for example, separate
On 2003.01.03, Jim Davidson [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Here's another variant which could be useful. AOLserver 4.0 allows you to
load the nssock driver outside a specific virtual server and then map to
virtual servers via the Host header. As with old 2.x virtual servers, you
can then have
In a message dated 1/3/2003 1:05:34 PM Central Standard Time, [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
#ns_section ns/modules
#ns_section nssock nssock.so
The second line of this sample config snippet should read
ns_param nssock nssock.so
__
michael richman
princ software engineer
aol
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