André Warnier wrote:
John ORourke wrote:I believe you could resolve this as follows (although it is really a "brute force" method) : Instead of one <VirtualHost *:*>, you could define 2 sections, entirely copy of eachother except for :Hi folks,I can't seem to find a way to retrieve the inbound port number during requests.I have a server listening on multiple ports, and need to know which one the request came in on. Here's the setup:apache config: Listen 127.0.0.1:81 Listen 127.0.0.1:82 NameVirtualHost *:* <VirtualHost *:*> ...... </VirtualHost><VirtualHost *:81> PerlSetVar ConnType "HTTP" .... </VirtualHost> <VirtualHost *:82> PerlSetVar ConnType "HTTPS" .... </VirtualHost>and then in your script/handler get the ConnType config value to tell the difference.
Addendum :Apart from he brute force method above, I believe there must be numerous other ways to achieve best what you really need. For instance, I would have a look at the Apache SetEnvIf configuration directive, which may be used to set an environment variable later retrieved by your script/module. I would also imagine that a HTTPS request already includes some specific HTTP headers which a HTTP request does not have, and you could test for that (either in the script/module or with SetEnvIf). Which method really works best in your case, and which is the most efficient, is left as an exercise to the reader.
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