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)

Hash-based load balancing

When you need to ensure that hash-based load balancing is the optimal choice, commonly, the client's IP address is used as the pattern to match so that any issues with cookies and per upstream server session tracking is sticky. This means that every subsequent request from the same hash will always route to the same upstream server (unless there's a fault with the upstream server).

How to do it...

The upstream block directive looks exactly the same as the round-robin configuration, except we now explicitly tell NGINX to use the hash method—a reminder that this needs to remain outside of the server block directive. Here's our upstream block:

upstream localapp { 
    hash $remote_addr...