Book Image

NGINX Cookbook

By : Tim Butler
Book Image

NGINX Cookbook

By: Tim Butler

Overview of this book

NGINX Cookbook covers the basics of configuring NGINX as a web server for use with common web frameworks such as WordPress and Ruby on Rails, through to utilization as a reverse proxy. Designed as a go-to reference guide, this book will give you practical answers based on real-world deployments to get you up and running quickly. Recipes have also been provided for multiple SSL configurations, different logging scenarios, practical rewrites, and multiple load balancing scenarios. Advanced topics include covering bandwidth management, Docker container usage, performance tuning, OpenResty, and the NGINX Plus commercial features. By the time you've read this book, you will be able to adapt and use a wide variety of NGINX implementations to solve any problems you have.
Table of Contents (14 chapters)

Setting up NGINX with Express

Rather than being overly opinionated, Express is a very minimalistic and flexible framework suited for web and mobile application deployments based on Node.js. It's also one of the most popular bases for some of the more complex and feature-packed Node.js frameworks too, which is why it makes a great learning block for Node.js web deployments.

Getting ready

Express is so minimalistic that it doesn't come with any boilerplate code to get you started. There are a number of generators out there which can set up a structure for you, however, I'm going to stick to a simple web page and a WebSocket for testing. Here's my Express file:

var express = require('express');...