d6jg wrote: 
> It’s easy to run Apache & LMS on the same machine and have Apache
> reverse proxy LMS so that :9000 is never visible but you are not really
> explaining why you want to do it. Is this actually an attempt to access
> LMS remotely? If so it’s not secure doing it this way.

I'm not trying to access LMS remotely.  Understood that is not secure. 
I'm strictly working within my home network and behind my home firewall.
In my work from home (WFH) office, I have a work laptop, controlled by
my company and I access our office through VPN (although my issues
persist regardless of if I am using VPN or not, this is not VPN
related).  I have a Boom in my office, which I can absolutely control
via the remote or my phone.  I'm just playing here, this isn't mission
critical, just fun.  My work laptop has a firewall, which (arbitrarily
IMHO) allows me to access port 80 on  machines in my local network, but
blocks other ports.  While sitting in my office chair, I'd LIKE to use
the web interface rather than than my phone or some alternate machine or
the remote/physical device, to control my Boom.  Since I can't control
my work machines (arbitrary) firewall rules, which blindly accepts port
80, but blocks 8080, etc., I'm trying to get an instance of LMS to be
visible on port 80 somewhere.  But since the server box already uses 80
for another service, I'm trying to avoid remapping that service or
rehosting LMS on another server.  

For me this is more a mental exercise to learn new skills, as I know
it's possible but I just don't know the tools to achieve it.  I hope
that's helpful in explaining?  LMK if not.


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