

I’m assuming that you are trying to proxy an http web server. If not, you’re going to have a hard time with nginx. Can you post your nginx config? Are you getting any response from nginx at all?
I’m assuming that you are trying to proxy an http web server. If not, you’re going to have a hard time with nginx. Can you post your nginx config? Are you getting any response from nginx at all?
No more rhyming, I mean it!
🤯
“homo sapiens” is not plural. “homo sapien” is not a thing.
It’s got a bush? What the hell?
…a lowercase ‘t’
…t…t…time to leave!
Send GNUdes.
Pitter patter…
I think you meant to post this on [email protected].
If I’m going through the hassle of bringing my own bucket, I’m bringing my own popcorn too.
Don’t be silly. He stands still while pissing, pinching and unpinching in sync with the urinal’s rotation.
They’re not really in financial trouble. They just need more money to develop new tools to compete with industry standard software like Autodesk, Maya, Houdini, etc.
But the dog’s name was Indiana!
MC Pea Plants
anal bum cover
Needs more jpeg.
That is the dishwasher.
Don’t forget to cup the… oh… yeah, I guess just the head then.
Well they say comedy = tragedy + time
, so if that’s the case, then there is really only one movie.
Assuming your local service is accessible from the nginx server, you can proxy the request to it:
…where
10.100.100.2
is your local IP on the VPN and3000
is the local port your service is listening on, and80
is the public port your nginx server listens on. Everything that hits your nginx server athttp://yourserver.com/
will proxy back to your local service athttp://10.100.100.2:3000/
. Depending on what you’re hosting, you may need to add some things to the config.