# Set another default user than root for security reasons user www www; # As a thumb rule: One per CPU. If you are serving a large amount # of static files, which requires blocking disk reads, you may want # to increase this from the number of cpu_cores available on your # system. # # The maximum number of connections for Nginx is calculated by: # max_clients = worker_processes * worker_connections worker_processes 1; # Maximum file descriptors that can be opened per process # This should be > worker_connections worker_rlimit_nofile 8192; events { # When you need > 8000 * cpu_cores connections, you start optimizing # your OS, and this is probably the point at where you hire people # who are smarter than you, this is *a lot* of requests. worker_connections 8000; } # Change these paths to somewhere that suits you! error_log logs/error.log; pid logs/nginx.pid; http { # Set the mime-types via the mime.types external file include mime.types; # And the fallback mime-type default_type application/octet-stream; # Format for our log files log_format main '$remote_addr - $remote_user [$time_local] $status ' '"$request" $body_bytes_sent "$http_referer" ' '"$http_user_agent" "$http_x_forwarded_for"'; # Click tracking! access_log logs/access.log main; # ~2 seconds is often enough for HTML/CSS, but connections in # Nginx are cheap, so generally it's safe to increase it keepalive_timeout 20; # You usually want to serve static files with Nginx sendfile on; tcp_nopush on; # off may be better for Comet/long-poll stuff tcp_nodelay off; # on may be better for Comet/long-poll stuff # Enable Gzip: gzip on; gzip_http_version 1.0; gzip_comp_level 5; gzip_min_length 512; gzip_buffers 4 8k; gzip_proxied any; gzip_types # text/html is always compressed by HttpGzipModule text/css text/javascript text/xml text/plain text/x-component application/javascript application/x-javascript application/json application/xml application/rss+xml font/truetype font/opentype application/vnd.ms-fontobject image/svg+xml; # This should be turned on if you are going to have pre-compressed copies (.gz) of # static files available. If not it should be left off as it will cause extra I/O # for the check. It would be better to enable this in a location {} block for # a specific directory: # gzip_static on; gzip_disable "MSIE [1-6]\."; gzip_vary on; server { # listen 80 default_server deferred; # for Linux # listen 80 default_server accept_filter=httpready; # for FreeBSD listen 80 default_server; # e.g. "localhost" to accept all connections, or "www.example.com" # to handle the requests for "example.com" (and www.example.com) # server_name www.example.com; # Path for static files root /sites/example.com/public; #Specify a charset charset utf-8; # Custom 404 page error_page 404 /404.html; # No default expire rule. This config mirrors that of apache as outlined in the # html5-boilerplate .htaccess file. However, nginx applies rules by location, the apache rules # are defined by type. A concequence of this difference is that if you use no file extension in # the url and serve html, with apache you get an expire time of 0s, with nginx you'd get an # expire header of one month in the future (if the default expire rule is 1 month). # Therefore, do not use a default expire rule with nginx unless your site is completely static # cache.appcache, your document html and data location ~* \.(?:manifest|appcache|html|xml|json)$ { expires -1; access_log logs/static.log; } # Feed location ~* \.(?:rss|atom)$ { expires 1h; add_header Cache-Control "public"; } # Favicon location ~* \.ico$ { expires 1w; access_log off; add_header Cache-Control "public"; } # Media: images, video, audio, HTC, WebFonts location ~* \.(?:jpg|jpeg|gif|png|ico|gz|svg|svgz|ttf|otf|woff|eot|mp4|ogg|ogv|webm)$ { expires 1M; access_log off; add_header Cache-Control "public"; } # CSS and Javascript location ~* \.(?:css|js)$ { expires 1y; access_log off; add_header Cache-Control "public"; } # opt-in to the future add_header "X-UA-Compatible" "IE=Edge,chrome=1"; } }