F5F Stay Refreshed Power Users Networks Yes, it is feasible to assign one external IP address to multiple sites using the same port.

Yes, it is feasible to assign one external IP address to multiple sites using the same port.

Yes, it is feasible to assign one external IP address to multiple sites using the same port.

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Transilvanya
Junior Member
44
04-09-2016, 04:48 AM
#1
You're looking to set up multiple small sites using subdomains instead of including ports in the URLs. It sounds like you want domain.com to point to Server One and service.domain.com to go to Server Two. Since you only have one public IP address, all traffic needs to be directed to a single external destination before being routed internally. The key here is whether your network setup allows for multiple destinations to be handled from a single IP. If it's possible with DNS routing and load balancing, that would work. If not, you might need a router or load balancer to manage the traffic distribution. Your idea of using a router like Dream Machine Pro could help streamline this process.
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Transilvanya
04-09-2016, 04:48 AM #1

You're looking to set up multiple small sites using subdomains instead of including ports in the URLs. It sounds like you want domain.com to point to Server One and service.domain.com to go to Server Two. Since you only have one public IP address, all traffic needs to be directed to a single external destination before being routed internally. The key here is whether your network setup allows for multiple destinations to be handled from a single IP. If it's possible with DNS routing and load balancing, that would work. If not, you might need a router or load balancer to manage the traffic distribution. Your idea of using a router like Dream Machine Pro could help streamline this process.

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shadowgtr
Member
222
04-09-2016, 05:17 AM
#2
You'd require a load balancer. Kemp LoadMaster supports porting several servers via HTTPS, and it's completely free. https://freeloadbalancer.com/
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shadowgtr
04-09-2016, 05:17 AM #2

You'd require a load balancer. Kemp LoadMaster supports porting several servers via HTTPS, and it's completely free. https://freeloadbalancer.com/

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62
04-16-2016, 05:57 AM
#3
A load balancer is what you're referring to, or you can use virtual hosts with pass-through. Both Apache and IIS work well with it—they all go through one server before sending traffic to another. Don't bother asking how to set it up; it gets complicated. My top pick is F5, but that's just my opinion.
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xfrenchgamingx
04-16-2016, 05:57 AM #3

A load balancer is what you're referring to, or you can use virtual hosts with pass-through. Both Apache and IIS work well with it—they all go through one server before sending traffic to another. Don't bother asking how to set it up; it gets complicated. My top pick is F5, but that's just my opinion.

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ImRio
Member
64
04-16-2016, 01:42 PM
#4
ok, I have it running as a virtual appliance and I can see connections in statistics under virtual services, but nothing is making real servers. Right now I have no content filters applied, as this is all new I just want to get data flowing through the then get it to start filtering. Would you have any insight on what might be going on?
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ImRio
04-16-2016, 01:42 PM #4

ok, I have it running as a virtual appliance and I can see connections in statistics under virtual services, but nothing is making real servers. Right now I have no content filters applied, as this is all new I just want to get data flowing through the then get it to start filtering. Would you have any insight on what might be going on?

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woodskill137
Member
60
04-16-2016, 08:31 PM
#5
You're asking about what's actually running on real servers. Real servers are the physical machines themselves. When you assign a virtual IP, you must connect your servers to that IP.
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woodskill137
04-16-2016, 08:31 PM #5

You're asking about what's actually running on real servers. Real servers are the physical machines themselves. When you assign a virtual IP, you must connect your servers to that IP.

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destroyer1101
Junior Member
14
04-22-2016, 02:17 AM
#6
I overlooked two small words, sorry about that. No traffic reaches the actual servers. I can observe the links on the virtual services, but it seems nothing gets through to the real server and it becomes unreachable. If I configure port forwarding for 80 and 443 directly to the real server, it works again, so my guess is there’s an issue with the ladmaster settings. Since I’m new to this software, I don’t even know where to begin.
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destroyer1101
04-22-2016, 02:17 AM #6

I overlooked two small words, sorry about that. No traffic reaches the actual servers. I can observe the links on the virtual services, but it seems nothing gets through to the real server and it becomes unreachable. If I configure port forwarding for 80 and 443 directly to the real server, it works again, so my guess is there’s an issue with the ladmaster settings. Since I’m new to this software, I don’t even know where to begin.

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epicbrish
Junior Member
46
04-27-2016, 09:22 PM
#7
The guides I was following recommended enabling transparency, which seemed to be the issue. Now I’m trying to uncover content filters since they aren’t visible on my virtual service page.
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epicbrish
04-27-2016, 09:22 PM #7

The guides I was following recommended enabling transparency, which seemed to be the issue. Now I’m trying to uncover content filters since they aren’t visible on my virtual service page.

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STEVEJasonson
Member
171
04-27-2016, 10:09 PM
#8
Also experiencing problems with no links connecting to the HTTP page—appears to go to HTTPS instead or not reaching it at all.
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STEVEJasonson
04-27-2016, 10:09 PM #8

Also experiencing problems with no links connecting to the HTTP page—appears to go to HTTPS instead or not reaching it at all.