No, that is what I am doing. That is done by a different mechanism in NGINX which is why you're not seeing the proxying occur in that block. You have to purchase NGINX Enterprise or compile the open source version of the software with stream proxying enabled. Instructions for the latter are on the README of my github repository above. After which you can define stream{} blocks in addition to hby hanz_zimmer - How to...
I no longer have a VPN block defined in my nginx config on that GitHub repository. I rebuilt my lab on Proxmox a few weeks ago and haven't gotten around to implementing the VPN server again. If you look at the older commits on that repo you should be able to find an entry for it though. For example: https://github.com/zimmertr/NGINX-Reverse-Proxy-Config/blob/849bb53ea7835cb5637764b5daf2ba8b352by hanz_zimmer - How to...
Here you are. :) Let me know if you need any help. https://github.com/zimmertr/NGINX-Reverse-Proxy-Configby hanz_zimmer - How to...
@tmtben Yes, I did. I actually had forgotten to forward the ports I was using for OpenVPN on my AWS Security Group.....by hanz_zimmer - How to...
I have been using NGINX as a reverse proxy for my home domain for a little over a year now. The proxy lives in an AWS EC2 instance and delivers traffic to my home IP Address and disguises all of the ugly port combinations. I've never managed to get my OpenVPN server to work with NGINX though. When I try and connect to the server from BEHIND NGINX via my domain name, it times out and says: Tby hanz_zimmer - How to...