To reinforce what Peter suggestion - I don't believe that Galaxy's default web server (paste) is capable of handling partial byte ranges and so my understanding is you must set a proxy like Apache or nginx up in front of Galaxy in order to use the UCSC browser in this fashion.

-John


On Tue, Mar 11, 2014 at 8:41 AM, Pete Schmitt <Peter.R.Schmitt@dartmouth.edu> wrote:
No, the galaxy server serves up itself on port 8080.



On 3/11/14, 9:39 AM, Peter Cock wrote:
Are you using Apache? This might help:

http://lists.bx.psu.edu/pipermail/galaxy-user/2012-November/005508.html
https://wiki.galaxyproject.org/Admin/Config/ApacheProxy

Peter

On Tue, Mar 11, 2014 at 1:16 PM, Pete Schmitt
<Peter.R.Schmitt@dartmouth.edu> wrote:
Where would the configuration be in the galaxy server that would cause
something like this.  This worked in the previous year-old version of
galaxy that was installed.



On 3/11/14, 6:21 AM, Peter Cock wrote:

This looks like Galaxy asking for part of a BAM file, using a byte range
request, but the server hosting the BAM file is not handling this. It is
probably a configuration error on that server, or perhaps in a proxy?

Peter


--
Pete Schmitt
Technical Director: 
   Discovery Cluster
   NH INBRE Grid
   Computational Genetics Lab
   Institute for Quantitative
          Biomedical Sciences
Dartmouth College, HB 6203
L12 Berry/Baker Library
Hanover, NH 03755

Phone: 603-646-8109

http://discovery.dartmouth.edu
http://columbia.dartmouth.edu/grid
http://www.epistasis.org
http://iQBS.org




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