<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?><rss version="2.0"><channel><title>Netvouz / falko / tag / reverse</title>
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<description>falko&#39;s bookmarks tagged &quot;reverse&quot; on Netvouz</description>
<item><title>How To Set Up A Caching Reverse Proxy With Squid 2.6 On Debian Etch</title>
<link>http://www.howtoforge.com/how-to-set-up-a-caching-reverse-proxy-with-squid-2.6-on-debian-etch</link>
<description>This article explains how you can set up a caching reverse proxy with Squid 2.6 in front of your web server on Debian Etch. If you have a high-traffic dynamic web site that generates lots of database queries on each request, you can decrease the server load dramatically by caching your content for a few minutes or more (that depends on how often you update your content).</description>
<category domain="http://netvouz.com/falko?category=6101149612142001527"></category>
<author>falko</author>
<pubDate>Sun, 28 Dec 2008 10:57:37 GMT</pubDate>
</item><item><title>How To Set Up nginx As A Reverse Proxy For Apache2 On Ubuntu 12.04</title>
<link>http://www.howtoforge.com/how-to-set-up-nginx-as-a-reverse-proxy-for-apache2-on-ubuntu-12.04</link>
<description>nginx (pronounced &quot;engine x&quot;) is a free, open-source, high-performance HTTP server. nginx is known for its stability, rich feature set, simple configuration, and low resource consumption. This tutorial shows how you can set up nginx as a reverse proxy on front of an Apache2 web server on Ubuntu 12.04.</description>
<category domain="http://netvouz.com/falko?category=6101149612142001527"></category>
<author>falko</author>
<pubDate>Sun, 07 Oct 2012 09:22:41 GMT</pubDate>
</item><item><title>How To Speed Up Drupal 7.7 With Boost And nginx (Debian Squeeze)</title>
<link>http://www.howtoforge.com/how-to-speed-up-drupal-7.7-with-boost-and-nginx-debian-squeeze</link>
<description>This tutorial shows how you can speed up your Drupal 7.7 installation on a LAMP stack (Debian Squeeze) with the help of Boost and nginx. Boost provides static page caching for Drupal enabling a very significant performance and scalability boost for sites that receive mostly anonymous traffic. Boost makes sure that your logged-in users always get fresh content by not caching pages for logged-in users. In a first step I will show how to make your site faster by enabling Boost on a normal LAMP stack (Apache2, PHP, MySQL), and in a second step I explain how to make your site even faster by using nginx as a reverse proxy sitting in front of Apache and delivering the static HTML pages cached by Boost. nginx delivers static files a lot of faster than Apache and us</description>
<category domain="http://netvouz.com/falko?category=6101149612142001527"></category>
<author>falko</author>
<pubDate>Sun, 21 Aug 2011 18:28:51 GMT</pubDate>
</item><item><title>Running ISPConfig On Port 80 Using Apache&#39;s Reverse Proxy Feature (Debian Etch)</title>
<link>http://www.howtoforge.com/apache_reverse_proxy_ispconfig</link>
<description>This article shows how you can configure a Debian Etch system that has the webhosting control panel ISPConfig installed so that ISPConfig can be accessed on port 80. By default ISPConfig uses port 81 which is a non-standard port and is blocked by some firewalls and ISPs. By using Apache&#39;s mod_proxy module, we can avoid this problem. It lets us create a reverse proxy that can fetch the pages from ISPConfig on port 81.</description>
<category domain="http://netvouz.com/falko?category=6101149612142001527"></category>
<author>falko</author>
<pubDate>Fri, 25 May 2007 09:10:49 GMT</pubDate>
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