Manual talk:$wgFileCacheDepth

Serving pages directly through nginx
Inspired by the Apache tutorial, I've managed to write a small script to serve cached files directly through nginx. It works well, it is very fast and it falls back to MediaWiki if the files don't exist.

Since the nginx configuration language is pretty limited (it doesn't allow nested if statements, for example), I did it in Lua. It requires the ngx_lua module.

The following conf should be integrated inside your server block, and it assumes that:
 * you're using fancy urls like example.com/Page;
 * your cache folder is inside your MediaWiki folder (default);
 * you're already proxying *.php files to php-fpm (or whatever) in the last location block.

And here are the limitations:
 * as with the Apache solution, you have to run a cron job or manually rebuild the cache files when they change;
 * pages whose title include non-ASCII characters are served through PHP (which should be transparent to the user anyway).

Change paths as needed.

location ~ /cache/(.*) { internal; } location / { default_type 'text/html'; rewrite_by_lua ' local cookie = ngx.req.get_headers["Cookie"] or "" if string.match(cookie, "UserID") then -- if we are logged in... ngx.exec("@rewrite") else local page = string.sub(ngx.var.request_uri, 2, -1) -- get the page name without the leading slash local filename = page .. ".html" local f = io.open("/var/www/w/cache/" .. filename, "r") if f ~= nil then -- if the file exists, close it and serve it directly io.close(f) ngx.header["x-wiki-cache"] = "via nginx" -- headers to help you debug ngx.exec("/cache/" .. filename) else ngx.header["x-wiki-cache"] = "via mediawiki" ngx.exec("@rewrite") end end '; } location @rewrite { rewrite ^/([^?]*)(?:\?(.*))? /index.php?title=$1&$2 last; }

--Gika (talk) 17:34, 25 May 2013 (UTC)