How to setup 2 services with same DNS?











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1
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I had 2 service on a server that run on 2 different port. one of them on port 80 and another on port 3000. I want to address them with same DNS like this:



http://xxx.ttt.yy : the one that run on port 3000



http://xxx.ttt.yy/zzz : the one that run on port 80



what should i do?










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  • What operating system and which web server?
    – harrymc
    Nov 28 at 10:08










  • @harrymc OS : linux(debian) WS: apache
    – Zoha Rad
    Nov 28 at 10:16












  • @harrymc And if it help, I run Filerun on port 80 and swagger-ui on port 3000
    – Zoha Rad
    Nov 28 at 10:26

















up vote
1
down vote

favorite












I had 2 service on a server that run on 2 different port. one of them on port 80 and another on port 3000. I want to address them with same DNS like this:



http://xxx.ttt.yy : the one that run on port 3000



http://xxx.ttt.yy/zzz : the one that run on port 80



what should i do?










share|improve this question
























  • What operating system and which web server?
    – harrymc
    Nov 28 at 10:08










  • @harrymc OS : linux(debian) WS: apache
    – Zoha Rad
    Nov 28 at 10:16












  • @harrymc And if it help, I run Filerun on port 80 and swagger-ui on port 3000
    – Zoha Rad
    Nov 28 at 10:26















up vote
1
down vote

favorite









up vote
1
down vote

favorite











I had 2 service on a server that run on 2 different port. one of them on port 80 and another on port 3000. I want to address them with same DNS like this:



http://xxx.ttt.yy : the one that run on port 3000



http://xxx.ttt.yy/zzz : the one that run on port 80



what should i do?










share|improve this question















I had 2 service on a server that run on 2 different port. one of them on port 80 and another on port 3000. I want to address them with same DNS like this:



http://xxx.ttt.yy : the one that run on port 3000



http://xxx.ttt.yy/zzz : the one that run on port 80



what should i do?







dns port domain domain-name






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Nov 28 at 9:46

























asked Nov 28 at 9:33









Zoha Rad

83




83












  • What operating system and which web server?
    – harrymc
    Nov 28 at 10:08










  • @harrymc OS : linux(debian) WS: apache
    – Zoha Rad
    Nov 28 at 10:16












  • @harrymc And if it help, I run Filerun on port 80 and swagger-ui on port 3000
    – Zoha Rad
    Nov 28 at 10:26




















  • What operating system and which web server?
    – harrymc
    Nov 28 at 10:08










  • @harrymc OS : linux(debian) WS: apache
    – Zoha Rad
    Nov 28 at 10:16












  • @harrymc And if it help, I run Filerun on port 80 and swagger-ui on port 3000
    – Zoha Rad
    Nov 28 at 10:26


















What operating system and which web server?
– harrymc
Nov 28 at 10:08




What operating system and which web server?
– harrymc
Nov 28 at 10:08












@harrymc OS : linux(debian) WS: apache
– Zoha Rad
Nov 28 at 10:16






@harrymc OS : linux(debian) WS: apache
– Zoha Rad
Nov 28 at 10:16














@harrymc And if it help, I run Filerun on port 80 and swagger-ui on port 3000
– Zoha Rad
Nov 28 at 10:26






@harrymc And if it help, I run Filerun on port 80 and swagger-ui on port 3000
– Zoha Rad
Nov 28 at 10:26












1 Answer
1






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up vote
1
down vote



accepted










To achieve this with HTTP, you need to run a reverse proxy software (e.g. nginx or Apache with the mod_proxy_http module) on port 80, and configure it to forward requests to other ports.



For example, in nginx,



location / { proxy_pass http://localhost:3000; }

location /zzz/ { proxy_pass http://localhost:81; }


Note: The service that currently uses port 80 will need to be moved to another port first (or at least configured to listen on loopback IP address only).






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    1 Answer
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    1 Answer
    1






    active

    oldest

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    active

    oldest

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    active

    oldest

    votes








    up vote
    1
    down vote



    accepted










    To achieve this with HTTP, you need to run a reverse proxy software (e.g. nginx or Apache with the mod_proxy_http module) on port 80, and configure it to forward requests to other ports.



    For example, in nginx,



    location / { proxy_pass http://localhost:3000; }

    location /zzz/ { proxy_pass http://localhost:81; }


    Note: The service that currently uses port 80 will need to be moved to another port first (or at least configured to listen on loopback IP address only).






    share|improve this answer

























      up vote
      1
      down vote



      accepted










      To achieve this with HTTP, you need to run a reverse proxy software (e.g. nginx or Apache with the mod_proxy_http module) on port 80, and configure it to forward requests to other ports.



      For example, in nginx,



      location / { proxy_pass http://localhost:3000; }

      location /zzz/ { proxy_pass http://localhost:81; }


      Note: The service that currently uses port 80 will need to be moved to another port first (or at least configured to listen on loopback IP address only).






      share|improve this answer























        up vote
        1
        down vote



        accepted







        up vote
        1
        down vote



        accepted






        To achieve this with HTTP, you need to run a reverse proxy software (e.g. nginx or Apache with the mod_proxy_http module) on port 80, and configure it to forward requests to other ports.



        For example, in nginx,



        location / { proxy_pass http://localhost:3000; }

        location /zzz/ { proxy_pass http://localhost:81; }


        Note: The service that currently uses port 80 will need to be moved to another port first (or at least configured to listen on loopback IP address only).






        share|improve this answer












        To achieve this with HTTP, you need to run a reverse proxy software (e.g. nginx or Apache with the mod_proxy_http module) on port 80, and configure it to forward requests to other ports.



        For example, in nginx,



        location / { proxy_pass http://localhost:3000; }

        location /zzz/ { proxy_pass http://localhost:81; }


        Note: The service that currently uses port 80 will need to be moved to another port first (or at least configured to listen on loopback IP address only).







        share|improve this answer












        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer










        answered Nov 28 at 12:10









        grawity

        230k35483542




        230k35483542






























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