WordPress specific Nginx configurations, tweaks, and much more!
There are multiplpe advantages of using this repo as your go-to nginx configuration.
- Correct use of
if
statement because ifisevil. - SSL / LetsEncrypt / Certbot compatible.
- Multisite support.
- Contains ready-to-use sample vhost entries.
- Continuously updated sample configurations with best practices.
- IPv6 is supported out of the box.
- Cloudflare support.
- WebP support.
- WP Super Cache plugin (with support for SSL and separate mobile cache)
- WP Rocket cache plugin (SSL and / or mobile supported out of the box)
- WP Fastest Cache plugin (SSL and / or mobile supported out of the box)
- Multisite (sub-domain and sub-directory)
- Varnish with Nginx for SSL termination.
- Custom error pages.
- Catchall template.
- All static content have maximum expiration headers.
- SSL session cache is enabled by default.
- Brotli compression support.
- Open file cache support.
- Server-level 301 support (for http => https, non-www => www, etc).
- Autoptimize support.
- Support for strong dhparam.
- TLSv1 and other insecure protocols are disabled by default.
- Mitigate httpoxy vulnerability.
- HSTS support.
- Security headers to fit most sites (no CSP, though, as it varies depending on the site).
- All hidden and backup files are forbidden by default.
- Passes most security features in Sonar Scanner.
- Gets 'A+' grade in Qualys SSL Labs.
Tested with the following servers...
- Debian 9 (Stretch)
- Debian 10 (Buster)
- Ubuntu 16.04 LTS (Xenial Xerus)
- Ubuntu 18.04 LTS (Bionic Beaver)
- Ubuntu 20.04 LTS (Focal Fossa)
Tested with the following Nginx versions...
- Stable verisons 1.12.x, 1.14.x, 1.20.x
- Mainline versions 1.13.x, 1.15.x, 1.19.x
For RPM based distros (Fedora, Redhat, CentOS and Amazon Linux AMI), the configuration mentioned in the repo is likely to work. Additional steps may be needed, though. See below for some details!
CentOS has a different file naming convention, yet simple directory structure, when compared to Debian derivatives. Let me describe them and I'd let you decide upon how you'd want to structure your files and name those files.
- The configuration for default sites are named as
default.conf
andssl.conf
in/etc/nginx/conf.d/
. - There is no
sites-available
orsites-enabled
folder. - The file
/etc/nginx/fastcgi_params
in Debian is named as/etc/nginx/fastcgi.conf
in CentOS.
Short answer: Use WordPress in a box. It sets up your server with all the goodies, including this repo!
Long answer:
Note: For all the steps mentioned below, sudo or root privilege is required!
Step #1 - Install Nginx
You may use the official Nginx repo or just use the Nginx package that comes with the OS. Both would work fine! I will leave the decision to you. Since, the installation process varies across Operating Systems, please refer the official installation guide to complete this step.
If you prefer to use the Nginx packages that comes with the OS, you may need to run the following...
sudo apt install nginx
or
sudo yum install nginx
Step #2 - Please backup your existing configuration files. Probably, have /etc
under version control!
TIMESTAMP=$(date +%F_%H-%M-%S)
mkdir ~/nginx-backup-$TIMESTAMP
sudo cp -a /etc/nginx ~/nginx-backup-$TIMESTAMP
Step #3 - Copy this repo to your server.
git clone https://github.com/pothi/wordpress-nginx.git ~/git/wordpress-nginx
sudo cp -a ~/git/wordpress-nginx/* /etc/nginx/
sudo mkdir /etc/nginx/sites-enabled &> /dev/null
sudo cp /etc/nginx/nginx.conf /etc/nginx/
Further steps varies depending on your particular requirement:
- you may edit /etc/nginx/conf.d/lb.conf and update the upstream block for 'fpm' (one-off process; done automatically if you use WordPress in a LEMP Box)
- then you may do the following for each vhost (domain), depending on your environment...
WP_DOMAIN=example.com
WP_ROOT=/path/to/wordpress/for/example.com
sudo cp /etc/nginx/sites-available/example.com.conf /etc/nginx/sites-available/$WP_DOMAIN.conf
sudo sed -i 's:/home/username/sites/example.com/public:'$WP_ROOT':gp' /etc/nginx/sites-available/$WP_DOMAIN.conf
sudo sed -i 's/example.com/'$WP_DOMAIN'/g' /etc/nginx/sites-available/$WP_DOMAIN.conf
cd /etc/nginx/sites-enabled/
sudo ln -s ../sites-available/$WP_DOMAIN.conf
sudo nginx -t && sudo systemctl restart nginx
- I specialize in hosting (high-traffic) WordPress / PHP sites.
- I'm one of the top contributors for the tag Nginx in ServerFault.
- Have released couple of WordPress Plugins, one of them is specifically for high performance WordPress sites... https://profiles.wordpress.org/pothi#content-plugins.
- Have two active blogs... Tiny WordPress Insights and Tiny Web Performance Insights.
Yes. I offer paid support and can implement it on your server. Minimum fee is USD50. Please contact me for any queries in this regard.
Please ping me on Twitter or send me a message.
If you find this repo useful, please spread the word! Suggestions, discussion on best practices, bug reports, future requests, forks are always welcome!