Wednesday, February 5, 2014

Multiple servers behind One IP

Part 1 in a series

As a systems consultant, I have to deliver a number of software and hardware solutions to customers; in order to do so, I have to know what I'm doing (I know: shocking!), and that takes study and practice. As followers of this blog know, I've got a nice little setup in my basement, and the process of teaching myself these technologies, I've gotten to the point where I want to actually use some of those things.

So, I do what lots of people do: I set up these services and enable port forwarding in my NAT firewall, sending the traffic on a port-by-port basis to the servers that are listening for connections.
Port Forwarding behind a single IP address
In some cases, I don't even have to set up a forward: the device on my network uses a protocol known as "Universal Plug 'N Play" (UPnP) to request port forwarding directly from the router. This all works well as long as I don't have more than one "inside" device listening on a given port. Unfortunately, this leaves me in a conundrum: most of these new & useful applications are using web services—or maybe just the TCP/80 and TCP/443 ports—which makes it hard to manage behind a home router.
The problem: only one destination per port
One alternative is to use non-standard ports for the connections; unfortunately, many applications don't permit the use of non-standard ports (erk!), or when they do, their use is incredibly cumbersome on the client.

Another option—less desirable, and not always functional—is co-installing everything on a single machine. This sets you up for all sorts of compatibility issues and potentially negative interactions. Plus: when we have a virtual environment available, isn't it desirable to have single-purpose machines to avoid all those annoyances?

Luckily, there's a solution: use a proxy (or, more precisely, a reverse proxy). A standard proxy will accept many different outgoing requests and act as a single point of contact for the returning requests. A reverse proxy takes a single incoming request, and after inspecting the request, decides which one among many destinations will receive the traffic.
Reverse Proxy to direct traffic
There are a lot of solutions out there that can provide this solution; this series of blog posts will focus on the Citrix NetScaler VPX Express. This solution has several things going for it, not only for use in the home lab:
  1. It's free.
  2. A pair is easy to configure for high availability (and is still covered under the no-cost license!)
  3. It can be configured for multiple protocols, not just HTTP and/or HTTPS
  4. A simple license update and it can support far more than the included 5Mb/s capacity.
  5. "Playing" with it can directly translate into using the product in business scenarios.

Parts in this series:

2 comments:

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