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I have server, bought from Linode. I decided to setup a mail server on it. I have about 20 domains will be pointing it.
I have a couple of questions;
This is the combination i will use; postfix + dovecot + squirrelmail. Are there better alternatives? I am completely open for recommadations because this is the first time i will setup a mail server.
Is it possible to use multiple domains with one mail server?
If it is possible to work with multiple domains, is it require a complicated and painful configuration?
Note: I can't use Google Apps because 40 EUR for per mail address is very expensive when you have a hundred mail address.
You have to have at least a basic understanding of how DNS works. It can be kind of a pain, but if you use one of the postfix plugins for management, should be fine. But yes, multi-domains on the same server is fine, it just has to know that it is representing those host hame records, and your DNS for your domains needs to be configured to have the MX records point at your server's IP.
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I host some services at home myself and so far have only used DNS records and self-signed certificates for them. Now I'm having some issues with self-signed certificates (some apps are not working properly) and am trying to get a public domain to fix these issues. Before I do that, I just want to clear up one question that I have.
If I had my own public domain, let's say example.com and created a local subdomain, let's say plex.example.com. Can I create a Let's Encrypt SSL Certificate for this local subdomain? or should the subdomain also be public?
As I understand, you can use wildcard certificate for subdomains. For example, you can obtain certificate for *.example.com and use it for all your subdomains.
However, you cannot obtain non-wildcard certificate for a local network. See the guidance from CA browser forum:
4.2.2.Approval or Rejection of Certificate Applications
CAs SHALL NOT issue certificates containing Internal Names (see
section 7.1.4.2.1).
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I was learning nginx and as I found out that it is a load balancer helping to handle a loads of requests to a server. The question I wanted to ask is that as I also found out, nginx is best to be used when one server gets overloaded and we need to add up one more server. So, is it true that nginx is best to used ONLY when one server cannot handle the number of requests?
Although it looks like Nginx should be added only when you need to load balance between multiple servers, and IMO this decision is correct as sometimes it is good to avoid increasing the entropy if you can't manage it.
But apart from being a load balancer, Nginx is also widely used for:
Reverse proxy for multiple services [virtual hosts] (load balancing isn't mandatory)
Content caching (to avoid request hitting upstream servers everytime)
SSL termination
API Gateway (for security, rate limiting and routing)
Sometimes, also as a web server
so even if you aren't load-balancing you can get benefit from facilities provided by nginx like content caching, SSL termination, rate limiting, etc.
Later when need arises you can easily add more machines in the upstream to start load balancing.
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Some URLs have both https and www.
What is the reason behind this?
For example, https://www.facebook.com starts with https://www. Is this redundant?
https is the protocol. It stands for hyper text transfer protocol (over TLS).
It means that you surf on websites and it is encrypted. By default, the protocol is http(no encryption) but this is often redirected to https.
www is the server.
It can be anything but in most cases, the web server is www. Also, the domains redirect you to the webserver (if it is configured that way) if you don't type it in explicitely.
Lastly, facebook.com is the domain.
Facebook registered to own the domain facebook.com. (.com are normally commercial websites) With that, they can deploy servers on addresses that end with .facebook.com in a way that they are found.
e.g. https://www.facebook.com means that you want to talk using the protocol https(secure web transfer) with the www server of facebook.com.
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I want to redirect my static IP to my domain.if entered IP its redirect to domain and show domain on URL. My web site is http://www.ramadoor.co and ip is : 87.247.179.84 .its on IIS and ASP.NET webform.Tanks
May be it helps you.
If the IP is assigned properly in the site binding and you're not using a host header then all you need to do is ensure that the domain name is registered and the A Record (host record) in DNS is pointing to the IP of the site.
It sounds like either DNS is not configured properly or the IIS site bindings are not configured properly or within your application there is some type of redirect occurring.
Add a binding to a site IIS 7
http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/cc731692(v=ws.10).aspx
Configure a Host Header for a Web Site (IIS 7)
http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/cc753195(v=ws.10).aspx
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I have a good experience with Unicorn configuration with conjunction of Nginx, it works really well after optimizations and tuning procedures. But now I have got a question what is the best way to spread the load across multiple machines with Unicorns.
The question is you have 3 machines (Nginx load balancer, 2 APP servers with Unicorns), how do you manage load balancing of Unicorns with serving static assets.
Do you now any drawbacks with connection to Unicorn over TCP (timeouts, connection lost), is there any other way to upstream socket connection over the network (maybe port forwarding over SSH)? Unicorn designed to be stateless, but how do you manage the edge cases?
I don't want to serve static from balancer node, so would it be ok to setup Nginx on each of APP server and setup dumb Nginx balancer in front of them?
P.S. My current configuration is well-tested and can be found on Github, but the setup with Nginx+Unicorn on the same machine that already became a bottleneck.
UPDATE: Development is rigidly depends on the specific server configuration. Bottlenecks are going to happen not just because of developer's decisions, but also with the environment where he run it. Stackoverlow is full with highly marked Q&A related to the hard-to-know details about specific configuration. Alex who answered below works with Github I'm really appreciate to have a reply by such qualified person!
Don't access the Unicorns over TCP/network.
Your setup seems just fine, you can simply add a load-balancer in front of the APP servers, but I would suggest Keepalived (LVS ftw) as load-balancer instead of Nginx.
You can have them balance connections to the APP servers running Nginx+Unicorns over sockets.