Microsoft KB Archive/300435

= How To Securely Publish Multiple Web Sites by Using ISA Server in Windows 2000 and Windows 2003 =

Article ID: 300435

Article Last Modified on 11/1/2006

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APPLIES TO


 * Microsoft Windows Server 2003, Standard Edition (32-bit x86)
 * Microsoft Windows Server 2003, Enterprise Edition (32-bit x86)
 * Microsoft Windows Server 2003, Datacenter Edition (32-bit x86)
 * Microsoft Windows 2000 Server
 * Microsoft Internet Security and Acceleration Server 2000 Standard Edition

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This article was previously published under Q300435



IN THIS TASK
SUMMARY Publishing the Web Sites
 * To Create the First Destination Set
 * Create the Web Publishing Rules

Troubleshooting REFERENCES



SUMMARY
This step-by-step instruction guide describes how Internet Security and Acceleration (ISA) Server 2000 publishes multiple Web sites to the Internet. This guide uses one server running on Windows 2000 Server SP2 with Microsoft Internet Information Services (IIS) and a second server running Windows 2000 Server Service Pack 2 (SP2) and ISA Server.

For people to find Web sites on the Internet, the site's name must be associated with the public IP address of the ISA Server computer's external network adapter. The ISP or network administrator can help with this. DNS will typically have an entry for www. .com pointing to the ISA Server computer's external adapter.

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Publishing the Web Sites
To route requests for http://www. .com/site1 to SERVER1 and requests for http://www. .com/site2 to SERVER2, destination sets must first be created for each internal server. The Web publishing rules that are created later will link the URLs to the appropriate internal servers.

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To Create the First Destination Set

 * 1) Start the ISA Server management console (Click Start, point to Programs, point to Microsoft ISA Server, and then click ISA Management).
 * 2) Expand the Servers folder in the left pane, and then expand the folder for your server.
 * 3) Right-click Destination Sets, point to New, and then click Set.
 * 4) Name the set (for example Site 1), and then click Add to add a server to the set.
 * 5) In the Destination box, type the name of the site that you set up with your ISP (www. .com in this example).
 * 6) In the Path box, type /site1/* . The asterisk is very important.
 * 7) Click OK in the rest of the dialog boxes.

NOTE: Repeat these steps to create a destination set called Site 2 (step 6) with the path &quot;/site2/*&quot; in step 9.

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Create the Web Publishing Rules
Web publishing rules direct requests to the correct servers. Use these steps to create the first rule:
 * 1) In the left pane, expand the Publishing folder.
 * 2) Right-click Web Publishing Rules, point to New, and then click Rule.
 * 3) Name the rule Site 1.
 * 4) Click Specified destination set, and then click Site 1.
 * 5) Click Any request.
 * 6) Click Redirect the request to this internal Web server (name or IP address).
 * 7) Click Browse, click SERVER1, and then click Finish.

NOTE: Repeat these steps to create a rule called Site 2 (step 3), using the Site 2 destination set (step 4), and redirecting to SERVER2 (step7).

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Troubleshooting

 * When people connect to the site, they do not see the server you published.

People who connect to the site may see a generic &quot;under construction&quot; page or nothing at all. This is most likely because IIS is running on the ISA Server computer itself. Requests to the site are then directed to IIS on the ISA Server computer. You should uninstall IIS from the ISA Server computer. The ISA Server computer should be running only ISA Server and nothing else.
 * You are trying to publish multiple sites, but they are not working correctly.

Make sure that you have your destination sets and publishing rules configured correctly. The destination set should specify your ISA Server computer's external name as the destination, along with a path that matches what you want people to type in their browsers when they want to access the corresponding internal server. The Web publishing rule should include the correct destination set and should refer to the correct internal server. Go back and look through the example in section 1. and pay particular attention to the dependencies.

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