How to setup 2 services with same DNS?
up vote
1
down vote
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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?
dns port domain domain-name
add a comment |
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?
dns port domain domain-name
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
add a comment |
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?
dns port domain domain-name
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
dns port domain domain-name
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
add a comment |
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
add a comment |
1 Answer
1
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).
add a comment |
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
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).
add a comment |
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).
add a comment |
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).
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).
answered Nov 28 at 12:10
grawity
230k35483542
230k35483542
add a comment |
add a comment |
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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