Server IP : 104.21.14.48 / Your IP : 3.128.205.122 [ Web Server : Apache System : Linux b70eb322-3aee-0c53-7c82-0db91281f2c6.secureserver.net 6.1.90-1.el9.elrepo.x86_64 #1 SMP PREEMPT_DYNAMIC Thu May 2 12:09:22 EDT 2024 x86_64 User : root ( 0) PHP Version : 8.0.30.2 Disable Function : NONE Domains : 0 Domains MySQL : ON | cURL : ON | WGET : ON | Perl : OFF | Python : OFF | Sudo : OFF | Pkexec : OFF Directory : /var/www/wp-content/plugins/sucuri-scanner/inc/tpl/ |
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<div class="sucuriscan-panel"> <h3 class="sucuriscan-title">{{Reverse Proxy}}</h3> <div class="inside"> <p>{{The event monitor uses the API address of the origin of the request to track the actions. The plugin uses two methods to retrieve this: the main method uses the global server variable <em>Remote-Addr</em> available in most modern web servers, and an alternative method uses custom HTTP headers <em>(which are unsafe by default)</em>. You should not worry about this option unless you know what a reverse proxy is. Services like the <a href="https://sucuri.net/website-firewall/" target="_blank" rel="noopener">Sucuri Firewall</a> — once active — force the network traffic to pass through them to filter any security threat that may affect the original server. A side effect of this is that the real IP address is no longer available in the global server variable <em>Remote-Addr</em> but in a custom HTTP header with a name provided by the service.}}</p> <div class="sucuriscan-hstatus sucuriscan-hstatus-2"> <span>{{Reverse Proxy}} — %%SUCURI.ReverseProxyStatus%%</span> <form action="%%SUCURI.URL.Settings%%" method="post"> <input type="hidden" name="sucuriscan_page_nonce" value="%%SUCURI.PageNonce%%" /> <input type="hidden" name="sucuriscan_revproxy" value="%%SUCURI.ReverseProxySwitchValue%%" /> <button type="submit" class="button button-primary" data-cy="sucuriscan_reverse_proxy_toggle">%%SUCURI.ReverseProxySwitchText%%</button> </form> </div> </div> </div>