The idea is to have nginx installed and node installed. I will extend this gist to include how to install those as well, but at the moment, the following assumes you have nginx 0.7.62 and node 0.2.3 installed on a Linux distro (I used Ubuntu).
In a nutshell,
- nginx is used to serve static files (css, js, images, etc.)
- node serves all the "dynamic" stuff.
So for example, www.foo.com request comes and your css, js, and images get served thru nginx while everything else (the request for say index.html or "/") gets served through node.
- nginx listens on port 80.
- node listens on port 8124 (for this example only. you can change this port for your node app).
So in your /etc/nginx/sites-available/default
modify your location /
stanza and add the second stanza of this code block:
location / {
proxy_pass http://127.0.0.1:8124; #this is the ip:port where your node app runs
root /var/www/yoursitename;
expires 30d;
#uncomment this is you want to name an index file:
#index index.php index.html;
access_log off;
}
location ~* ^.+\.(jpg|jpeg|gif|png|ico|css|zip|tgz|gz|rar|bz2|pdf|txt|tar|wav|bmp|rtf|js|flv|swf|html|htm)$ {
root /var/www/yoursitename/public;
}
Note: I did not change the /etc/nginx/nginx.conf file. It is still the default nginx.conf
from the nginx installation.
Now, restart nginx.
/etc/init.d/nginx restart
(Re)start your node app.
node /path/to/your/node/app.js
Navigate to your site and verify.
Enjoy blazing fast static files and blazing fast dynamic content.
Same problem here @cybermarkus1