I compile Nginx mainline from source and update every release. I run a small
fleet of open source project and some small business Linux servers with
multiple websites per server. There are occasions when a site is taken down
for maintenance (typically minutes or hours of downtime out of peak hours)
https://blog.devcloud.hosting/configuring-nginx-for-quickly-switching-to-maintenance-mode-e4136cf497f3
https://forum.openresty.us/d/4770-c84503afcecd42ad08f3ec457c0948b7
Posted at Nginx Forum:
https://forum.nginx.org/read.php?2,288057,288058#msg-288058
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On Fri, May 15, 2020 at 11:09:53PM -0400, allenhe wrote:
Hi there,
> w.r.t. the "http://nginx.org/r/proxy_buffering";, the doc does not mention if
> the buffering works for header, body or both,
It's "the response".
It sounds like it should be fairly straightforward to test on your setup,
if yo
On Sat, May 16, 2020 at 05:24:42AM -0400, petecooper wrote:
Hi there,
> At present, each site is managed by a monolithic
> `subdomain.example.com.conf` file with its own `server` block and associated
> directives. I manually change the `root` for each state when a site changes
> mode.
> Each sit
Hi Francis.
Francis Daly Wrote:
---
> I suggest that you'll be happier in the long run using a templating
> language, or macro-substituting language, external to nginx; along
> with
> "source" conf files that are to have the substitutions applied
I’m trying to learn how to pass special Magento 1.x URLs such as this to a
PHP-FPM backend.
/js/index.php/x.js?f=prototype/prototype.js,prototype/validation.js,mage/adminhtml/events.js,mage/adminhtml/form.js,scriptaculous/effects.js
All the Nginx configs I’ve found (e.g.
https://gist.github.com/r