Basically my scenario is that I have an internal website that requires a SINGLE hard-coded username and password to access (and this can't be turned off, only changed). I am exposing this website through a reverse proxy for various reasons (hiding the port, simplifying url, simplifying NAT, etc).
However, what I would like to do is be able to use Apache to handle the authentication so that:
- I don't have to give out single password to everyone
- I can have multiple usernames and passwords using Apache's BasicAuth
- For internal users, I don't have to prompt for a password
EDIT: Second part about richer authentication has been moved to new question
Here's more or less what I have now:
<VirtualHost *:80>
ServerName sub.domain.com
ProxyPass / http://192.168.1.253:8080/endpoint
ProxyPassReverse / http://192.168.1.253:8080/endpoint
# The endpoint has a mandatory password that I want to avoid requiring users to type
# I.e. something like this would be nice (but does not work)
# ProxyPass / http://username:[email protected]:8080/endpoint
# ProxyPassReverse / http://username:[email protected]:8080/endpoint
# Also need to be able to require a password to access proxy for people outside local subnet
# However these passwords will be controlled by Apache using BasicAuth, not the ProxyPass endpoint
# Ideas?
</VirtualHost>
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