Hi Kurtis,
Thanks for your advice.
> your question is overly broad for this mailing list.
> It is very unlikely someone is going to take the (unpaid)
> time to evaluate your specific situation and propose a solution.
This is ONLY a test NOT for commercial application.
> Then you need another system that handles all traffic
> to/from your single fixed/static IP address on which
> you can run a "reverse proxy" and forwards traffic to
> the appropriate VMs on your VirtualBox host.
Several years ago I did following test;
One Fixed/Static IP serving multiple mail servers running on VMs. Each mail
server has its own domain. I ran Perdition on a VM. It worked seamlessly.
Emails were delivered to respective servers. I have posted my solution on
several forums before.
I doubt whether Perdition can help me out on my current test ?
Regards
SL
Kurtis Rader <[email protected]> 於 2015年12月28日 (週一) 10:58 AM 寫道﹕
On Sun, Dec 27, 2015 at 6:36 PM, Stephen Liu <[email protected]> wrote:
> You need to set up one webserver on the fixed IP as a proxy
If I understand it correctly. Run a webserver on a VM with the Fixed/Static IP
forwarded to it on the router and set up it as Proxy?
That is what I'm most interested rather than installing Apache on the host and
run it as Proxy.
Stephen, your question is overly broad for this mailing list. It is very
unlikely someone is going to take the (unpaid) time to evaluate your specific
situation and propose a solution. This is really something you should be paying
a consultant to help you find a satisfactory solution. Having said that you
should be looking to employ a "reverse proxy" of some sort. That could be an
Apache httpd instance dedicated to doing nothing more than responding to
requests on your fixed/static IP by looking at the "Host" header and forwarding
the request to the appropriate web server running in one of your virtual
machines and passing the response back to the requestor. There are also
software and hardware solutions optimized for this task such as
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Squid_(software).
I expect keeping the Host clean for running VirtualBox ONLY.
Then you need another system that handles all traffic to/from your single
fixed/static IP address on which you can run a "reverse proxy" and forwards
traffic to the appropriate VMs on your VirtualBox host.
--
Kurtis RaderCaretaker of the exceptional canines Junior and Hank