I run multiple websites (along with my own) for fellow amateur radio operators, along with my local club's secondary website on my server (2008 R2 Enterprise, with IIS7).
I choose to use MDaemon for our e-mail server, as it's one of the easiest mail servers to manage. My question now comes in how to do a proper re-direct/re-write so that the URL stays on the 'friendly' URL address?
Example - MDaemon's default webmail access is on port 3000, so 'http://xxxxx.com:3000' works perfectly. I want my users to be able to use 'webmail.xxxxx.com' to get to the exact same location, but to not have the URL reset in the address bar to 'http://xxxxx.com:3000' (which is all I've been able to do to get it working via IIS7's own 'HTTP Redirect' option).
Anyone have some basic tips to give a web newbie like me a better understanding of how to make it do what I want (if possible).
I've been googling for the last hour to no avail...
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Guest w2sjw
Guys,
I run multiple websites (along with my own) for fellow amateur radio operators, along with my local club's secondary website on my server (2008 R2 Enterprise, with IIS7).
I choose to use MDaemon for our e-mail server, as it's one of the easiest mail servers to manage. My question now comes in how to do a proper re-direct/re-write so that the URL stays on the 'friendly' URL address?
Example - MDaemon's default webmail access is on port 3000, so 'http://xxxxx.com:3000' works perfectly. I want my users to be able to use 'webmail.xxxxx.com' to get to the exact same location, but to not have the URL reset in the address bar to 'http://xxxxx.com:3000' (which is all I've been able to do to get it working via IIS7's own 'HTTP Redirect' option).
Anyone have some basic tips to give a web newbie like me a better understanding of how to make it do what I want (if possible).
I've been googling for the last hour to no avail...
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