Installs Nginx on RedHat/CentOS or Debian/Ubuntu linux servers.
This role installs and configures the latest version of Nginx from the Nginx yum repository (on RedHat-based systems) or via apt (on Debian-based systems). You will likely need to do extra setup work after this role has installed Nginx, like adding your own [virtualhost].conf file inside /etc/nginx/conf.d/
, describing the location and options to use for your particular website.
None.
Available variables are listed below, along with default values (see vars/main.yml
and defaults/main.yml
):
nginx_remove_default_vhost: false
nginx_default_vhost_path: /etc/nginx/sites-enabled/default
Whether to remove the 'default' virtualhost configuration supplied by Nginx. Useful if you want the base /
URL to be directed at one of your own virtual hosts configured in a separate .conf file. The nginx_default_vhost_path
variable defines the path to the default vhosts file.
nginx_user: "nginx"
The user under which Nginx will run.
nginx_worker_processes: "1"
nginx_worker_connections: "8192"
nginx_worker_processes
should be set to the number of cores present on your machine. Connections (find this number with grep processor /proc/cpuinfo | wc -l
). nginx_worker_connections
is the number of connections per process. Set this higher to handle more simultaneous connections (and remember that a connection will be used for as long as the keepalive timeout duration for every client!).
nginx_client_max_body_size: "64m"
This value determines the largest file upload possible, as uploads are passed through Nginx before hitting a backend like php-fpm
. If you get an error like client intended to send too large body
, it means this value is set too low.
nginx_keepalive_timeout: "65"
The keepalive timeout. Should be set higher (10s+) if you have more polling-style traffic (AJAX-powered sites especially), or lower (<10s) if you have a site where most users visit a few pages and don't send any further requests.
None.
- hosts: server
roles:
- { role: geerlingguy.nginx }
MIT / BSD
This role was created in 2014 by Jeff Geerling, author of Ansible for DevOps.