Hi,
Maybe I'm misunderstanding how this should work. Can I use non-ssl
connections for upstream servers when the originating request is https?
I'm forwarding nginx requests to an apache server listening on 8080.
Everything works fine if I explicitly use http but not https. My nginx
site itself has no problem with https and all http traffic is forwarded
to https. However when I try to go to wordpress (on apache) I get an
error in my browser that I am forwarding plain http to https, and indeed
the port I see in the browser is 443 not 8080. Again if I explicitly
request http I'm good but it fails with https. Why is nginx forwarding
this traffic to 443 instead of 8080? Or probably better how do I change
this behavior?
So I'm trying to find out how nginx makes that decision. This is the
stanza nginx conf file.
server {
listen 80 default_server;
listen [::]:80;
server_name biscotty.me;
return 301 https://$hostname$request_uri;
}
server{
listen 443 ssl http2;
listen [::]:443 ssl;
server_name biscotty.me;
ssl_certificate /etc/nginx/ssl/certificates.crt;
ssl_certificate_key /etc/nginx/ssl/private.key;
root /var/www/html;
index index.html index.htm index.nginx-debian.html;
server_name _;
location / {
# First attempt to serve request as file, then
# as directory, then fall back to displaying a 404.
try_files $uri $uri/ =404;
}
location /wordpress {
proxy_pass http://0.0.0.0:8080;
proxy_buffering on;
proxy_buffers 12 12k;
proxy_redirect off;
proxy_set_header X-Real-IP $remote_addr;
proxy_set_header X-Forwarded-For $remote_addr;
proxy_set_header Host $host:8080;
}
}
_______________________________________________
nginx mailing list -- nginx@nginx.org
To unsubscribe send an email to nginx-leave@nginx.org