Registered socket 896 for persistent reuse. Registered socket 900 for persistent reuse. The output from wget -d was the following: $ wget -d DEBUG output created by Wget 1.11.4 on Windows-MSVC. Proxy_pass proxy_set_header X-Forwarded-For $remote_addr Proxy_set_header X-Forwarded-For $remote_addr # This server clause is contained in conf.d/nf Keyword: Display: packages that contain files named like this.
404 not found nginx 1.4 6 ubuntu full#
You can also get a full list of files in a given package. Here is the relevant (I hope) part of nginx config # file nf This search engine allows you to search the contents of Ubuntu distributions for any files (or just parts of file names) that are part of packages. I've also created one more location for experiments.
404 not found nginx 1.4 6 ubuntu Pc#
UPDATE2: I've tried to model this setup on my PC (Windows also) and use wget from Git distro. Chrome complained about SSL connection timeout on attempt to connect to localhost:80. However, I guess, it also requires some tuning of nginx, because simple SSH tunnel localhost:80 -> server:80 doesn't work. My goal is to give my colleague access to I can instruct him to establish one or several more SSH tunnels to my server. The respective tunnel is localhost:29418 -> :29418. My colleague, WindowsPC user, already successfully uses Putty and its SSH tunnel on port 29418 to connect to our Gerrit (which also listens on port 29418). I don't have neither login, nor superuser privileges on Other Linux. Windows PC can connect to Other Linux with SSH, and probably other ports and protocols are available. Other ports are blocked by firewalls, which I cannot affect. Other Linux can connect to my server on ports 80, 8. Other Linux and Windows PC also belong to the corporation network (it's large). Now, here comes that weird configuration.
![404 not found nginx 1.4 6 ubuntu 404 not found nginx 1.4 6 ubuntu](https://kinsta.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/08/502-bad-gateway-1-1024x512.png)
I remember that it contains lines with proxy_pass clause. Unfortunately, I cannot show nginx config right now, since I am writing this question from home. It hosts Gerrit and Jenkins, each of which has www-interface, listening on its own port (80), and nginx proxies requests to respective locations. My Ubuntu server (let's name it ) runs in an internal corporate network. I've inherited a fully functional and configured Ubuntu server with nginx and would like to tune it additionally to support a somewhat weird configuration, described below.īasic info.