Which version of chrome do you have? This version supports HTTP/2? I've just tried https://www.onestopmarketing.club with chromium and the network tab was correctly showing "h2".by Alt - Nginx Mailing List - English
Hello, Just use Chrome/Chromium: open the dev tools (F12 key), choose the "Network" tab and visit your website: "h2" should be displayed in the "Protocol" column :-) I don't remember, the "Protocol" column may not be visible by default: right click on the column headers (Name, Status,...) then check "Protocol". Best Regardsby Alt - Nginx Mailing List - English
Hello, Markus Linnala has found at least two bugs with afl-fuzz: http://forum.nginx.org/read.php?29,261583 http://forum.nginx.org/read.php?29,261582 nginScript is very new, I'm sure you can help to test it if you know how to use afl-fuzz. Best Regards, Olivierby Alt - Nginx Mailing List - English
Hello, If I understand well, you are streaming video files from PHP? Here PHP will kill your performance and you really should avoid that and stream directly from nginx. Best Regardsby Alt - Nginx Mailing List - English
Hello, I've never used python with nginx, but there are some examples on how to configure everything here: http://wiki.nginx.org/Configuration#Python_via_FastCGI Best Regardsby Alt - Nginx Mailing List - English
Hello, achnaide, if I understand well, you want to use nginx as a forward proxy? If that's right, then no, nginx is a popular reverse proxy, but not a forward proxy. As said itpp2012, you really should use Squid. Best Regardsby Alt - How to...
Hello, Thanks again Roman for the explanation and link! Best Regardsby Alt - Nginx Mailing List - English
Hello Roman, Thanks for the explanation. At which moment this revalidation is executed? When there's a new client request or is it done automatically when a cache entry is about to expire? The nginx's cache manager is deleting expiring cache file, so I'm not sure to understand how it all works. Best Regardsby Alt - Nginx Mailing List - English
Hello, From the documentation, I don't understand how the fastcgi_cache_revalidate (or scgi_cache_revalidate or proxy_cache_revalidate or uwsgi_cache_revalidate) works. Please, can someone explain what nginx does when cache is enabled and the revalidate directive is set to "on"? Best Regardsby Alt - Nginx Mailing List - English
Hello, Francis Daly asked you several times to check the access.log file (you should not find the fragment part in there). oscaretu and I told you browsers don't send the fragment part of an URL. The problem isn't from nginx nor the browser: it's a normal behavior. Best Regardsby Alt - Nginx Mailing List - English
Hello okamzol and thanks a lot for your answer! Yes, it's exactly the same question, looks like I'll need to use include. Best Regardsby Alt - Nginx Mailing List - English
Hello, I'm using PHP with nginx 1.9.2 and it works great! But there's something I don't understand with the add_header directive. I use add_header in server and location block, but it seems only the one in location is used. If I remove the add_header in the location block, I get the header I added in the server block. Here's a short example: server { add_header Strict-Transport-Secuby Alt - Nginx Mailing List - English
Why don't you try with requests to real pages, not to a fragment? "#" and everything after this character isn't sent to the web server, it's only used by the web client. You really should read at least: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fragment_identifier Some browsers will keep the fragment after the redirect, some others will drop it.by Alt - Nginx Mailing List - English