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NGINX HTTP Server

You're reading from   NGINX HTTP Server Harness the power of NGINX with a series of detailed tutorials and real-life examples

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Product type Paperback
Published in May 2024
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781835469873
Length 262 pages
Edition 5th Edition
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Authors (3):
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Martin Bjerretoft Fjordvald Martin Bjerretoft Fjordvald
Author Profile Icon Martin Bjerretoft Fjordvald
Martin Bjerretoft Fjordvald
Gabriel Ouiran Gabriel Ouiran
Author Profile Icon Gabriel Ouiran
Gabriel Ouiran
Mr. Clement Nedelcu Mr. Clement Nedelcu
Author Profile Icon Mr. Clement Nedelcu
Mr. Clement Nedelcu
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Toc

Table of Contents (17) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Part 1:Begin with NGINX FREE CHAPTER
2. Chapter 1: Downloading and Installing NGINX 3. Chapter 2: Basic NGINX Configuration 4. Part 2: Dive into NGINX
5. Chapter 3: Exploring the HTTP Configuration 6. Chapter 4: Exploring Module Configuration in NGINX 7. Chapter 5: PHP and Python with NGINX 8. Chapter 6: NGINX as a Reverse Proxy 9. Part 3: NGINX in Action
10. Chapter 7: Introduction to Load Balancing and Optimization 11. Chapter 8: NGINX within a Cloud Infrastructure 12. Chapter 9: Fully Deploy, Manage, and Auto-Update NGINX with Ansible 13. Chapter 10: Case Studies 14. Chapter 11: Troubleshooting 15. Index 16. Other Books You May Enjoy

Exploring the reverse proxy mechanism

Running NGINX as an application server is somewhat like the FastCGI architecture described in the previous chapter; we are going to be running NGINX as a frontend server, and for the most part, reverse proxy requests to our backend servers.

In other words, it will be in direct communication with the outside world whereas our backend servers, whether Node.js, Apache, and so on, will only exchange data with NGINX:

Figure 6.1: An example of using Nginx as a proxy server

Figure 6.1: An example of using Nginx as a proxy server

There are now two web servers running and processing requests.

NGINX, positioned as a frontend server (in other words, as a reverse proxy), receives all the requests coming from the outside world. It filters them, either serving static files directly to the client or forwarding dynamic content requests to our backend server.

Our backend server only communicates with NGINX. It may be hosted on the same computer as the frontend, in which case the listening ports must be edited to leave ports 80 and 443 available to NGINX. Alternatively, you can employ multiple backend servers on different machines and load balance between them.

To communicate and interact with each other, neither process will be using FastCGI. Instead, as the name suggests, NGINX acts as a simple proxy server; it receives HTTP requests from the client (acting as the HTTP server) and forwards them to the backend server (acting as the HTTP client). There is thus no new protocol or software involved. The mechanism is handled by the proxy module of NGINX, as detailed later in this chapter.

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