More than one person has asked me for my Nginx Virtual Host recipe for WordPress Multi-User and BuddyPress, so I’m posting it here. The attached virtual host definition is feature complete and works for me on a number of production sites.
Be sure to change domain.tld to your actual domain name. The wildcard record will allow your site to respond to ANY sudomain request, which may not be something you want.
You’ll also need to change the path to your log files, as well as the path to your public webroot folder. Finally, up the client_max_body_size to match your upload_max_filesize and post_max_size settings in php.ini.
Finally, this assumes you are running your PHP fast cgi process on port 9000.
This is the recipe for WordPress MU / BuddyPress. I’ve also posted one for WordPress (single site) and Drupal.
Download Nginx vhost Recipe for WordPress Mu and BuddyPress
Please post ways to improve this in the comments. I use this on a number of production sites, but there is always more one can do. Thanks to all of the blogs and articles that I ripped off helped me understand Nginx and got me started.
Since more than one person has asked me for my Nginx Virtual Host recipes, I figured I’d post it to my blog. The attached file should be good to go out of the box, but be sure to change domain.tld to your actual domain name. The wildcard record will allow your site to respond to ANY sudomain request, which may not be something you want.
You’ll also need to change the path to your log files, as well as the path to your public webroot folder. Finally, up the client_max_body_size to match your upload_max_filesize and post_max_size settings in php.ini.
Finally, this assumes you are running your PHP fast cgi process on port 9000.
This is the recipe for Drupal. I’ve also posted one for WordPress and WordPress MU / BuddyPress.
Download Nginx vhost for Drupal with imagecache support
Please post ways to improve this in the comments. I use this on a number of production sites, but there is always more one can do. Thanks to all of the blogs and articles that I ripped off helped me understand Nginx and got me started.
Since more than one person has asked me for my Nginx Virtual Host recipe for WordPress sites, I’m posting it here. Be sure to change domain.tld to your actual domain name. The wildcard record will allow your site to respond to ANY sudomain request, which may not be something you want.
You’ll also need to change the path to your log files, as well as the path to your public webroot folder. Finally, up the client_max_body_size to match your upload_max_filesize and post_max_size settings in php.ini.
Finally, this assumes you are running your PHP fast cgi process on port 9000.
This is the recipe for WordPress (single site). I’ve also posted one for Drupal and WordPress MU / BuddyPress.
Download Nginx vhost Recipe for WordPress
Please post ways to improve this in the comments. I use this on a number of production sites, but there is always more one can do. Thanks to all of the blogs and articles that I ripped off helped me understand Nginx and got me started.
Besides the very obvious (and common) joke in the title, this is a set of slides giving you an overview of what nginx can do for you and why you should be considering it over your current web server software. If you have any questions, please leave a comment. This talk was delivered at BarCamp Tampa Bay in September 26, 2009.
Continue reading ‘nginx: from russia with love’
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