[Nginx Server Configs homepage](https://github.com/h5bp/server-configs-nginx) | [Documentation table of contents](TOC.md) # Getting started Using the Nginx server configs repo directly has a few required steps to be able to work. ## Check `nginx.conf` settings The first thing to check is that the `nginx.conf` file contains appropriate values for your specific install. The web user varies with distribution, in most cases compare to the config file originally present, and use the same user: // /etc/nginx-original/nginx.conf user www-data www-data; Apply to the runtime config file: // /etc/nginx/nginx.conf #user www www; user www-data www-data; ## Configure logs and pid file The location of logs also varies from system to system. To account for this the `nginx.conf` file uses a relative path for logs: // /etc/nginx/nginx.conf error_log logs/error.log warn; There are two options to configure this appropriately, change the path to point at the folder where logs should be stored: // /etc/nginx/nginx.conf error_log /var/log/nginx/error.log warn; And: // /etc/nginx/h5bp/expires.conf access_log logs/static.log; To: // /etc/nginx/h5bp/expires.conf access_log /var/log/nginx/static.log; Or, setup a symlink to point at the right place: cd /etc/nginx ln -s /var/log/nginx logs The location of the pid file should also be checked and corrected if necessary. ## Creating a site definition An example server definition is provided in `sites-available/example.com`. Copy the file to `sites-available/yourdomainname.com` and edit appropriately. Verify specifically that the hostname (`example.com`) and the root are specified correctly. ## Enabling a site Activate the new site by linking `yourdomainname.com` into the `sites-enabled` directory: cd /etc/nginx/sites-enabled ln -s ../sites-available/yourdomainname.com . This will make the server active the next time nginx (re)starts. ## Verify config and restart nginx Verify the config and restart nginx to apply the changes. To verify nginx config (Tests default nginx config file) nginx -t **OR** To verify a particular nginx config file nginx -t -c nginx.conf This will test the nginx config file and throws error if any. Otherwise test is successful and you can restart nginx. Finally reload nginx to apply the changes. The `-s reload` flag means that it will send a signal to the main process to reload the configuration files. If it is valid, it starts accepting connections to the new configuration. The [documentation is more in depth](http://nginx.org/en/docs/beginners_guide.html#control) nginx -s reload