Thanks guys. I will take a look in your solutions and let you know if
everything is all right :)
On Feb 11, 2016 9:03 PM, "Shuai Lin" <[email protected]> wrote:

> Ok, seems I misunderstood a little bit. So the tasks are managed by
> chronos? Then you should follow Tomek's advice, using service discovery
> tool like mesos-consul (maybe together with consul template).
>
> Another less flexible but simpler solution is to list all the slaves in
> haproxy backends, e.g.
>
> listen myapp 0.0.0.0:12345
>     mode tcp
>     server slave1 10.1.1.11:12345
>     server slave2 10.1.1.12:12345
>     server slave3 10.1.1.13:12345
>     ...
>
>
>
>
> On Fri, Feb 12, 2016 at 7:45 AM, Alfredo Carneiro <
> [email protected]> wrote:
>
>> But how can I assign a domain to a task using haproxy?
>> On Feb 11, 2016 8:29 PM, "Shuai Lin" <[email protected]> wrote:
>>
>>> Since you already have haproxy running, why not use it as a reverse
>>> proxy?
>>>
>>> On Fri, Feb 12, 2016 at 3:31 AM, Alfredo Carneiro <
>>> [email protected]> wrote:
>>>
>>>> Hi guys,
>>>>
>>>> I have been searching for the past few weeks about Mesos and VHosts,
>>>> saddly, I have not found anything useful.
>>>>
>>>> I have a mesos cluster running some webapps. So, I have assigned
>>>> specifc ports to these apps, so I access this apps using
>>>> *http://<mesos-master-ip>:<app-port>*. How could I use Virtual Hosts
>>>> to access these apps? *http://myapp.com <http://myapp.com>*?
>>>>
>>>> 1x Mesos Master with HAProxy and Chronos
>>>> 9x Mesos Slave with Docker
>>>>
>>>> Thanks,
>>>>
>>>> --
>>>> Alfredo Miranda
>>>>
>>>
>>>
>

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