Hello, I'm hitting my head against a wall since a couple days ago. Last paragraph has the big question, the rest is context. I run a fairly big Wordpress blog, with a somewhat convoluted configuration rewriting legacy URLs that follow me since 2002. I use extensive caching via plugins that pregenerate HTML on disk and I rewrite requests to serve HTML instead of talking to PHP. Everything workedby cachito - Nginx Mailing List - English
B.R. Wrote: ------------------------------------------------------- > Hello, > > On Wed, Aug 21, 2013 at 9:42 PM, cachito <nginx-forum@nginx.us> wrote: > > > if ($http_cookie ~* > > > "comment_author|wordpress_+|wp-postpass|wordpress_logged_in") > { > > set $no_cache 1; > > } > > > > If the user seby cachito - Nginx Mailing List - English
My guess: If the compressed files are pregenerated and sitting on the filesystem (e.g. you have blah.json and blah.json.gz), nginx will serve them to any browser that sends the correct Accept-Encoding headers. Good luck.by cachito - Nginx Mailing List - English
Hello colleagues. I'm trying to save a website hosted on a (VERY) low-powered server by placing a strong nginx server in front of it as a caching proxy. I don't control the website code and the rest of its configuration, so I'm not free to move it elsewhere stronger. I'd like to have the caching proxy serve content as fresh as possible, regardless of the response given by the upstream. If thby cachito - Nginx Mailing List - English
Hello. I manage a small blog network (17) that has a lot of traffic (20MM visits/month). I use Wordpress Multisite to manage it, each blog has its own domain name, and all are served from the same WP install. I'm thinking about implementing SPDY to speed up the sites, I know I need SSL certificates for this to work. 1) Will I need a certificate for each website? Or just one certificate for tby cachito - Nginx Mailing List - English
Hello, I'm hosting a group of Wordpress blogs with about 200k visits and millions of hits per day. MySql + PHP live in a server (beefy VPS) and I placed a reverse proxy in front of it to cache most of the requests. Now I want to offload all the static files to a third server, taking advantage of a feature of common Wordpress cache plugins, that rewrites static file URLs for origin-pull CDN servby cachito - Nginx Mailing List - English
Hello, I'm hosting a series of Wordpress blogs with about 200k visits/day and millions of hits per day. MySql + PHP live in a server (beefy VPS) and I placed a reverse proxy in front of it to cache most of the requests. Now I want to offload all the static files to a third server, taking advantage of a feature of common Wordpress cache plugins, that rewrites static file URLs for origin-pull CDNby cachito - How to...