Hello,<br><div> </div><div>We are researching which tools would allow us to do what is described in the subject.</div><div><br></div><div>After searching the archives here and in other places like stackoverflow, there seems to be conflicting info on whether this is possible. Perhaps it was not doable early in nginx's life but is now? Based on the below link (which notes the upstream and reverse proxy modules), can we now have nginx listen on 443, and pass browser requests to it on to an upstream HTTPS server which actually serves content, has the certs/keys and takes care of SSL handshake etc? In our use case we cannot house any keys/certs on the nginx box so must proxy everything (including SSL) to the upstream https box, as if the end user (who makes the request from the browser) hit the upstream server directly, and doesn't have any missing or mismatching certificate errors.</div>
<div><br></div><div><a href="http://stackoverflow.com/questions/15394904/nginx-load-balance-with-upstream-ssl/15400260#15400260" target="_blank">http://stackoverflow.com/questions/15394904/nginx-load-balance-with-upstream-ssl/15400260#15400260</a><br>
</div><div><br></div><div>I hope my question is clear. Thanks for your help.</div><div><br></div>Gary
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