Difference between revisions of "Webservers/nginx"

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= Nginx =
== [https://www.digitalocean.com/community/tutorials/understanding-nginx-server-and-location-block-selection-algorithms server context] match order ==
For the <code>server {}</code> context selection nginx algorithm takes only 2 directives into account <code>listen</code> and <code>server_name</code>.
server {
    listen 80;
    server_name *.example.com;
    . . .
}
;Matching <code>listen</code> directive
At first <code>listen</code> directive is parsed, during this step any "incomplete" directives are added with default values
* no-ip -> set with <code>0.0.0.0</code>
* no-port -> set with port <code>:80</code>
The listen directive can be set to:
* An IP address/port combo.
* A lone IP address which will then listen on the default port 80.
* A lone port which will listen to every interface on that port.
* The path to a Unix socket
The most accurate <code>listen</code> directive match gets chosen.
;Matching <code>server_name</code> directive
If there are multiple the same listen directives, then <code>server_name</code> is being parsed in this order:
* exact match host header from the request
* leading wildcard (indicated by a <code>*</code> at the beginning of the name in the config). If multiple matches are found, the longest match will be used to serve the request.
* trailing wildcard (indicated by a server name ending with a <code>*</code> in the config). If multiple matches are found, the longest match will be used to serve the request.
* using regular expressions (indicated by a <code>~</code> before the name). The first server_name with a regular expression that matches the “Host” header will be used to serve the request.
* selects the <code>default_server</code> block for that IP address and port part of listen directive. There can be only one <code>default_server</code> declaration per each IP address/port combination.
* First block, for an IP address/port combo, this will either be the first block in the configuration or the block that contains the default_server option as part of the listen directive (which would override the first-found algorithm).
<source lang=json>
server {
    listen 80 default_server;
    server_name example.com;
    . . .
}
server {
    listen 80;
    server_name ~^(subdomain|set|www|host1).*\.example\.com$;
    . . .
}
server {
    listen 80;
    server_name www.example.*;
    . . .
}
server {
    listen 80;
    server_name *.org;
    . . .
}
</source>
=References=
=References=
*[https://serverfault.com/questions/527630/what-is-the-different-usages-for-sites-available-vs-the-conf-d-directory-for-ngi Sites-enabled vs conf.d] Explanation of standards and Debian-ism of <tt>sites-enabled</tt>.
*[https://serverfault.com/questions/527630/what-is-the-different-usages-for-sites-available-vs-the-conf-d-directory-for-ngi Sites-enabled vs conf.d] Explanation of standards and Debian-ism of <tt>sites-enabled</tt>.

Revision as of 10:24, 30 July 2020

Nginx

server context match order

For the server {} context selection nginx algorithm takes only 2 directives into account listen and server_name. server {

   listen 80;
   server_name *.example.com;
   . . .

}


Matching listen directive

At first listen directive is parsed, during this step any "incomplete" directives are added with default values

  • no-ip -> set with 0.0.0.0
  • no-port -> set with port :80


The listen directive can be set to:

  • An IP address/port combo.
  • A lone IP address which will then listen on the default port 80.
  • A lone port which will listen to every interface on that port.
  • The path to a Unix socket


The most accurate listen directive match gets chosen.


Matching server_name directive

If there are multiple the same listen directives, then server_name is being parsed in this order:

  • exact match host header from the request
  • leading wildcard (indicated by a * at the beginning of the name in the config). If multiple matches are found, the longest match will be used to serve the request.
  • trailing wildcard (indicated by a server name ending with a * in the config). If multiple matches are found, the longest match will be used to serve the request.
  • using regular expressions (indicated by a ~ before the name). The first server_name with a regular expression that matches the “Host” header will be used to serve the request.
  • selects the default_server block for that IP address and port part of listen directive. There can be only one default_server declaration per each IP address/port combination.
  • First block, for an IP address/port combo, this will either be the first block in the configuration or the block that contains the default_server option as part of the listen directive (which would override the first-found algorithm).


server {
    listen 80 default_server;
    server_name example.com;
    . . .
}
server {
    listen 80;
    server_name ~^(subdomain|set|www|host1).*\.example\.com$;
    . . .
}
server {
    listen 80;
    server_name www.example.*;
    . . .
}
server {
    listen 80;
    server_name *.org;
    . . .
}

References