Proxy Server is administered and configured with the Administration Server and the Server Manager web-based user interfaces. The Administration Server is used to manage configuration that is common to all Proxy Server instances installed on your system, while the Server Manager is used to configure settings for individual server instances.
This section contains the following topics:
Cookies must be enabled in your browser to run the CGI programs necessary for configuring your server.
The Administration Server is a web-based user interface used to manage configuration that is common to all Proxy Server instances installed on your system.
After the Administration Server has been started, the Administration Server is accessed by launching a browser and entering a URL. The URL is determined by the host name and port number specified during installation, for example, http://myserver.mycorp.com:1234.
More than one administrator can be granted access to the Administration Server. For more information about distributed administration, see Allowing Multiple Administrators.
Administration Server settings are organized by tabs that correspond to specific tasks. The following table lists the Administration Server tabs, followed by a brief description of the tasks that the tabs provide.
Preferences - Shutdown the Administration Server, edit listen sockets, configure superuser access, configure distributed administration allowing multiple administrators, customize and view access and error logs
Global Settings - Configure directory services, specify access control, configure SNMP master agent settings
Users and Groups - Add and manage users, groups, and organizational units
Security - Create new trust databases, request and install VeriSign and other certificates, change the key-pair file password, view and manage installed certificates, add or replace Certificate Revocation Lists and Compromised Key Lists (CRLs and CKLs), manage CRLs and CKLs, migrate 3.x certificates
Cluster - Control remote servers in a cluster, add and remove remote servers, modify server information
Regardless of the tab or page you are on, the following buttons also display:
Launch a browser and go to the URL that reflects the host name and port number specified for the Administration Server during installation, for example, http://myserver.mycorp.com:1234
When prompted, type the user name and password specified during installation.
The Administration Server’s user interface displays.
For more information about using the Administration Server, see Chapter 2, Administering Proxy Server. Also see the online help for Administration Server tabs and pages.
The Server Manager is the web-based user interface used to start, stop, and configure individual instances of Proxy Server.
Server Manager settings are organized by tabs that correspond to specific tasks. The following is a list of the Server Manager tabs, with a brief description of the tasks that the tabs provide.
Preferences - Start and stop the server, view server settings, restore configuration information, configure system preferences, tune Proxy Server performance, add and edit listen sockets, manage MIME types, administer access control, configure ACL and DNS caches, configure DNS local subdomains, configure HTTP keep-alive settings, set cipher size
Routing - Enable and disable proxying, set routing preferences, forward client credentials, enable Java IP address checking, create and edit autoconfiguration files, set the connectivity mode, change the default FTP transfer mode, set the SOCKS name server IP address, configure HTTP request load balancing
SOCKS - Start and stop the SOCKS server, and create and manage SOCKS authentication, connection, and routing entries
URLs - View, create, and manage URL mappings and redirections
Caching - Set cache specifics, add and modify cache partitions, move sections among existing partitions, set the cache capacity, set the garbage collection mode, tune the cache, schedule garbage collection, tune garbage collection settings, configure caching for specific resources, enable the caching of local hosts, change the file cache settings, set cache batch updates, view information about recorded cached URLs, configure proxies in an ICP neighborhood, create and update the proxy array member list, configure proxy array members, view information in the PAT file
Filters - Create filter files, set content URL rewriting, set user-agent restriction and request blocking, suppress outgoing headers, set MIME filters and HTML tag filters, compress content on demand
Server Status - View log files, archive logs, set log preferences, generate reports, monitor current activity, configure and control the SNMP subagent
Security - Create new trust databases, request and install VeriSign and other certificates, change the key-pair file password, view and manage installed certificates, add or replace Certificate Revocation Lists and Compromised Key Lists (CRLs and CKLs), manage CRLs and CKLs, migrate 3.x certificates
Templates - Create, remove, apply, and view templates, and remove resources
Regardless of the tab or page you are on, the following buttons also display:
Version - Displays version information about Proxy Server
Refresh - Refreshes the current page
Help - Displays online Help for the current page
At times, you might also see a Restart Required link below the Refresh button. This link indicates that changes have been made for which a server restart is required. To apply the changes, click the link and specify the desired action.
For more information about using the Server Manager, see related tasks in this guide. Also see the online Help for Server Manager tabs and pages.
Access the Administration Server as described in Administration Server Overview.
The Administration Server appears on the Servers tab.
On the Manage Servers page, click the link for the server instance you want to manage.
The Server Manager user interface appears.
The configuration and behavior of Proxy Server is determined by a set of configuration files. Settings configured in the administration interface are reflected in the configuration files. The files can also be edited manually.
The configuration files reside in the directory instance-dir/config, where instance-dir is the server instance. The config directory contains various configuration files that control different components. The number and names of the configuration files depend on which components have been enabled or loaded. This directory always contains four configuration files that are essential to server operation. The following table lists the four essential configuration files and their contents.
Table 1–1 Essential Configuration Files
File |
Contains |
---|---|
Most of the server configuration (new in this Proxy Server release) |
|
Global server initialization information |
|
Instructions for handling requests from clients |
|
Information for determining the content type of requested resources |
For detailed information about these files and other configuration files, see Oracle iPlanet Web Proxy Server 4.0.14 Configuration File Reference.
You can use regular expressions to identify resources and configure the Proxy Server to handle requests from different URLs differently. You can specify regular expressions as you perform a variety of tasks using the Administration Server and Server Manager user interfaces. For detailed information about the use of regular expressions, see Chapter 16, Managing Templates and Resources.