I ran into an issue the last couple days where we noticed some files were being gzipped from a site (in a reverse proxy config) and others were not. Initially we believed it to be due to the size of the buffer so we increased it, enormously. Yet, no resolution. We tried buffering, caching, compression levels, vary any, proxied, etc. We simply couldn't find the issue. We went with a hail mary anby Kevin - Nginx Mailing List - English
Change it to: server_name mydomain.com www.mydomain.com; -Kevin ------Original Message------ From: bhkien To: nginx@nginx.org ReplyTo: nginx@nginx.org Subject: Problem with Firefox Sent: Sep 4, 2010 3:49 PM Hi, I install NginX 0.8.50 on my server. It works OK with Internet Explorer, Chrome but on FireFox the website does not work without www. My virtual host config below server { listeby Kevin - Nginx Mailing List - English
Hard to say.. I am not personally familiar with Tornado but I do know nginx with a very similar config with keepalive's at 5/10 seconds will do much more than that.. It's a very odd situation. I know it sounds dumb but do you have any errors in your 'dmesg' or in the nginx logs? Is it running out of buffered memory or system sockets? Is reuse connections on in your sysctl's? I would double-checby Kevin - Nginx Mailing List - English
That's a fairly old package and likely is still vulnerable. Igor or another developer would be best to say whether the Debian team integrates patches into their packages. (Igor is on vacation) However, personally, I would download the source for the newest legacy version (if that's what you want) and compile it yourself. There are detailed instructions in the wiki for installation manually. Prby Kevin - Nginx Mailing List - English
Best performance you can get is off FreeBSD, just my personal opinion. -----Original Message----- From: Hone Watson <hone@codingstore.com> Date: Fri, 6 Aug 2010 13:46:11 To: <nginx@nginx.org> Reply-To: nginx@nginx.org Subject: Re: Sensible Performance/Growth Strategies? CentOS comes with more base packages and services on by default which causes extra unnecessary memory consumption.by Kevin - Nginx Mailing List - English
It's likely not in the right order. If I remember correctly, it is cert --> intermediary --> bundle Also verify there are no white spaces, etc. If you are running Windows as a desktop, you can copy and paste them out if you're VERY careful not to pick up white space or additional lines. Open it with wordpad, not notepad and copy it out. Otherwise, use an editor and copy / paste it out (likby Kevin - Nginx Mailing List - English
Scott, Disable proxy buffering and caching. This will resolve it. I've ran into this issue several times but have yet to find a clear explanation how to enable cookies and allow caching.by Kevin - Nginx Mailing List - English
Hmm.. Actually it appears when I test with 0.8.38: If I set: gzip on; and changed: https:// to http:// and restarted... The issue fixed itself. Hmmm... Anyway, just a mention. Maybe it was a config issue?by Kevin - Nginx Mailing List - English
Realized I couldn't edit my post. No issues are seen with reverse proxies (that we can tell) when using standard ports. It appears to be only on non-standard ports. Firewall had been disabled for testing as well. tcpdump shows the connections going out and a response coming back but it immediately drops to a 'Bad Gateway'. Downgraded to 0.7.xx (newest) and the issue was immediately resolvedby Kevin - Nginx Mailing List - English
I can't really post my config with all information but I can post the specific configuration for the site's that have issues. nginx 0.7.x does not show this problem. If you configure a SSL reverse proxy: server { listen 192.168.12.2:1001; ssl on; ssl_certificate /usr/local/nginx/cert/apache-cert; ssl_certificate_key /by Kevin - Nginx Mailing List - English