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  2. Nginx - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nginx

    Nginx is free and open-source software, released under the terms of the 2-clause BSD license. A large fraction of web servers use Nginx, [10] often as a load balancer. [11] A company of the same name was founded in 2011 to provide support and NGINX Plus paid software. [12] In March 2019, the company was acquired by F5 for $670 million. [13]

  3. List of HTTP header fields - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_HTTP_header_fields

    A server uses "Alt-Svc" header (meaning Alternative Services) to indicate that its resources can also be accessed at a different network location (host or port) or using a different protocol When using HTTP/2, servers should instead send an ALTSVC frame. [50] Alt-Svc: http/1.1="http2.example.com:8001"; ma=7200: Permanent Cache-Control

  4. URL redirection - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/URL_redirection

    Nginx has an integrated http rewrite module, [10] which can be used to perform advanced URL processing and even web-page generation (with the return directive). An example of such advanced use of the rewrite module is mdoc.su, which implements a deterministic URL shortening service entirely with the help of nginx configuration language alone ...

  5. Well-known URI - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Well-known_URI

    Well-known URIs are Uniform Resource Identifiers defined by the IETF in RFC 8615. [1] They are URL path prefixes that start with /.well-known/.This implementation is in response to the common expectation for web-based protocols to require certain services or information be available at URLs consistent across servers, regardless of the way URL paths are organized on a particular host.

  6. Reverse proxy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reverse_proxy

    In the case of reverse proxying web servers, the reverse proxy may have to rewrite the URL in each incoming request in order to match the relevant internal location of the requested resource. A reverse proxy can reduce load on its origin servers by caching static content and dynamic content, known as web acceleration. Proxy caches of this sort ...

  7. X-Forwarded-For - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/X-Forwarded-For

    The general format of the field is: [2] X-Forwarded-For: client, proxy1, proxy2 where the value is a comma+space separated list of IP addresses, the left-most being the original client, and each successive proxy that passed the request adding the IP address where it received the request from.

  8. Service Location Protocol - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Service_Location_Protocol

    The Service Location Protocol (SLP, srvloc) is a service discovery protocol that allows computers and other devices to find services in a local area network without prior configuration. SLP has been designed to scale from small, unmanaged networks to large enterprise networks.

  9. HTTP 301 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HTTP_301

    Omitting the Location header will confuse browsers and may result in unexpected behavior. Absolute URL Usage: While relative URLs might be accepted by some browsers, using absolute URLs in the Location header is the standard and ensures consistent behavior across all user agents.