According to Debian Wiki, Debian bullseye will reach its end-of-life date in July 2024. Therefore, the project will switch to Debian bookworm as the packaging environment in June 2024.
Update: already switched on June 25th.
- Features
- Usage
- Removed modules
- Add modules back
- Use in another distribution
- Recommended NGINX config
- Based on latest NGINX mainline version
- HTTP/3 and QUIC support, powered by quictls
- Brotli support, powered by ngx_brotli
- GeoIP2 support, powered by ngx_http_geoip2_module
- Headers More support, powered by ngx_headers_more
- Remove mountains of useless modules to improve performance
Run following commands.
wget https://github.com/ononoki1/nginx-http3/releases/latest/download/nginx.deb
sudo apt install ./nginx.deb
- All modules that are not built by default, except
http_ssl_module
,http_v2_module
andhttp_v3_module
http_access_module
http_autoindex_module
http_browser_module
http_charset_module
http_empty_gif_module
http_limit_conn_module
http_memcached_module
http_mirror_module
http_referer_module
http_split_clients_module
http_scgi_module
http_ssi_module
http_upstream_hash_module
http_upstream_ip_hash_module
http_upstream_keepalive_module
http_upstream_least_conn_module
http_upstream_random_module
http_upstream_zone_module
Fork this repo, enable GitHub Actions, edit build.sh
and find the modules you want. Then remove related parameters and wait for GitHub Actions to run. After it finishes, you can download from releases.
For example, if you want to add http_scgi_module
back, you need to remove --http-scgi-temp-path=/var/cache/nginx/scgi_temp
and --without-http_scgi_module
in build.sh
.
Fork this repo, enable GitHub Actions, edit Dockerfile
and build.sh
, and change bookworm
to the one you like. Then wait for GitHub Actions to run. After it finishes, you can download from releases.
For example, if you want to use in Debian bullseye, you need to change bookworm
to bullseye
.
Note: if you are using newer version of Debian (e.g. Debian trixie or unstable), you can still use releases for Debian bookworm as Debian is backward compatible.
http {
brotli on;
gzip on;
http2 on;
http3 on;
quic_gso on;
quic_retry on;
ssl_certificate /path/to/cert_plus_intermediate;
ssl_certificate_key /path/to/key;
ssl_ciphers ECDHE-ECDSA-AES128-GCM-SHA256:ECDHE-ECDSA-AES256-GCM-SHA384:ECDHE-ECDSA-CHACHA20-POLY1305; # change `ECDSA` to `RSA` if you use RSA certificate
ssl_early_data on;
ssl_protocols TLSv1.2 TLSv1.3;
ssl_session_cache shared:SSL:10m;
ssl_session_timeout 1d;
ssl_stapling on;
ssl_stapling_verify on;
server {
listen 80 reuseport;
listen [::]:80 reuseport; # delete if ipv6 is unavailable
return 444;
}
server {
listen 443 reuseport ssl;
listen [::]:443 reuseport ssl;
listen 443 reuseport quic;
listen [::]:443 reuseport quic;
ssl_reject_handshake on;
}
server {
listen 80;
listen [::]:80;
server_name example.com dynamic.example.com php.example.com www.example.com;
return 308 https://$host$request_uri;
}
server { # example for static site
listen 443;
listen [::]:443;
listen 443 quic;
listen [::]:443 quic;
server_name example.com;
root /path/to/static/site;
add_header Alt-Svc 'h3=":443"; ma=86400';
}
server { # example for dynamic site
listen 443;
listen [::]:443;
listen 443 quic;
listen [::]:443 quic;
server_name dynamic.example.com;
add_header Alt-Svc 'h3=":443"; ma=86400';
location / {
proxy_pass http://ip:port;
}
}
server { # example for dynamic site with php
listen 443;
listen [::]:443;
listen 443 quic;
listen [::]:443 quic;
server_name php.example.com;
root /path/to/php/site;
index index.php;
add_header Alt-Svc 'h3=":443"; ma=86400';
location ~ ^.+\.php$ {
include fastcgi_params;
fastcgi_param HTTP_PROXY '';
fastcgi_param SCRIPT_FILENAME $document_root$fastcgi_script_name;
fastcgi_pass unix:/path/to/php/sock;
}
}
server {
listen 443;
listen [::]:443;
listen 443 quic;
listen [::]:443 quic;
server_name www.example.com;
add_header Alt-Svc 'h3=":443"; ma=86400';
return 308 https://example.com$request_uri;
}
}