Yesterday I have changed my domain name hat was foobar.tk and it was running over https. For now, on my new domain foobar.eu I does not have ssl.
I have succeed with redireting using CNAME records while I am not using https, but somehow I cannot redirect https://www.example.tk to http://www.example.eu Chrome says that connection was resset. Firefox says that content cannot be validated,...
For redirection I am using these lines:
server {
listen 443; (note: i have tried with *:443, *:443 ssl, 443 ssl)
server_name www.example.tk; (i have tried with orwithout www.)
return 301 http://www.example.eu$request_uri; (i have tried to redir to $host also where then cname will handle the issue)
}
What works:
http://www.example.tk -> http://www.example.eu using CNAME (and all other subdomains)
What is not working:
https://www.example.tk -> http://www.example.eu
I still can certificates backed-up, so if it can help in some way please tell me.
Thank you
When setting up SSL on Nginx you should use ssl_certificate and ssl_certificate_key directives.
server {
listen 443 ssl;
server_name www.example.tk;
ssl_certificate /path/to/certificate; #.crt, .cert, .cer, or .pem file
ssl_certificate_key /path/to/private/key;
return 301 http://www.example.eu$request_uri;
}
These two files you can get from your Certificate Authority.
Also you should add ssl parameter to listen directive.
I have an Nginx server set up on an Ubuntu VPS with multiple hosts (1 IP). Previously, 1 host had certificates set up and NO redirecting (http allowed) and 1 host had certificates and forced HTTPS via 301. Now that I am attempting to force all of my hosts on SSL and force HTTPS, I am seeing that Nginx is dropping handshakes when I have more than 1 vhost with 301 directives. In particular, the error I am seeing is:
[error] 12370#0: *30 no "ssl_certificate" is defined in server listening on SSL port while SSL handshaking, client: (removed), server: 0.0.0.0:443
The issue definitely seems to be with my 301's, because if I exclude them I do not have an issue. What's the best way I can force HTTPS and non-www in my server blocks?
All of my vhosts are in /etc/nginx/conf.d, along with ssl.conf (listed below). I can provide nginx.conf if requested, but I didn't see anything that would seem useful in there.
example1.conf
server {
server_name www.example1.com example1.com;
return 301 https://example1.com$request_uri;
}
server {
listen 443;
server_name www.example1.com
return 301 https://example1.com$request_uri;
}
server {
listen 443 ssl;
server_name example1.com;
ssl_certificate /etc/letsencrypt/live/example1.com/cert.pem;
ssl_certificate_key /etc/letsencrypt/live/example1.com/privkey.pem;
root /var/www/example1.com;
location / {
try_files $uri $uri/ $uri.html =404;
}
access_log /var/log/nginx/example1.com.access.log;
error_log /var/log/nginx/example1.com.error.log;
}
example2.conf
same as example1.conf (except with example2.com instead of example1.com)
ssl.conf
ssl_session_cache shared:SSL:10m;
ssl_session_timeout 10m;
# Perfect Forward Security
ssl_protocols TLSv1 TLSv1.1 TLSv1.2;
ssl_prefer_server_ciphers on;
ssl_ciphers "EECDH+ECDSA+AESGCM EECDH+aRSA+AESGCM EECDH+ECDSA+SHA384 EECDH+ECDSA+SHA256 EECDH+aRSA+SHA384 EECDH+aRSA+SHA256 EECDH+aRSA+RC4 EECDH EDH+aRSA RC4 !aNULL !eNULL !LOW !3DES !MD5 !EXP !PSK !SRP !DSS +RC4 RC4";
# HSTS
add_header Strict-Transport-Security max-age=31536000;
Pointing out other obvious errors is also appreciated.
Solved (at least for now) by removing
server {
listen 443;
server_name www.example1.com
return 301 https://example1.com$request_uri;
}
It seems that since there's no cert specified, this block would get hit for all HTTPS requests and then the connection would get dropped.
I only have an SSL certificate for example.com and want to redirect both http://example.com and http://*.example.com to https://example.com using nginx. I'm aware of it being impossible to redirect subdomains via SSL without a certificate including all the subdomains, but at least, I should be able to redirect users who are typing www.example.com (port 80) to the SSL homepage.
My current nginx config starts as follows:
server {
# This should catch all non-HTTPS requests to example.com and *.example.com
listen 80;
server_name example.com *.example.com;
access_log off;
return 301 https://example.com$request_uri;
}
server {
listen 443 ssl;
# Actual server config starts here...
Requesting http://example.com will be redirected properly to https://example.com, whereas http://www.example.com leads to https://www.example.com (and of course, the browser is showing a certificate error). I think it has something to do with the processing order of the server_name values, but I haven't found any information about how to enforce a certain order.
Try to add another server {}
server {
listen 80;
server_name www.example.com
access_log off;
return 301 https://example.com$request_uri;
}
Try:
server_name example.com www.example.com *.example.com;
Taken directly from the Nginx docs.
I am using nginx on Rackspace cloud following a tutorial and having searched the net and so far can't get this sorted.
I want www.mysite.example to go to mysite.example as normal in .htaccess for SEO and other reasons.
My /etc/nginx/sites-available/www.example.com.vhost config:
server {
listen 80;
server_name www.example.com example.com;
root /var/www/www.example.com/web;
if ($http_host != "www.example.com") {
rewrite ^ http://example.com$request_uri permanent;
}
I have also tried
server {
listen 80;
server_name example.com;
root /var/www/www.example.com/web;
if ($http_host != "www.example.com") {
rewrite ^ http://example.com$request_uri permanent;
}
I also tried. Both the second attempts give redirect loop errors.
if ($host = 'www.example.com' ) {
rewrite ^ http://example.com$uri permanent;
}
My DNS is setup as standard:
site.example 192.192.6.8 A type at 300 seconds
www.site.example 192.192.6.8 A type at 300 seconds
(example IPs and folders have been used for examples and to help people in future). I use Ubuntu 11.
HTTP Solution
From the documentation, "the right way is to define a separate server for example.org":
server {
listen 80;
server_name example.com;
return 301 http://www.example.com$request_uri;
}
server {
listen 80;
server_name www.example.com;
...
}
HTTPS Solution
For those who want a solution including https://...
server {
listen 80;
server_name www.domain.example;
# $scheme will get the http protocol
# and 301 is best practice for tablet, phone, desktop and seo
return 301 $scheme://domain.example$request_uri;
}
server {
listen 80;
server_name domain.example;
# here goes the rest of your config file
# example
location / {
rewrite ^/cp/login?$ /cp/login.php last;
# etc etc...
}
}
Note: I have not originally included https:// in my solution since we use loadbalancers and our https:// server is a high-traffic SSL payment server: we do not mix https:// and http://.
To check the Nginx version, use nginx -v.
Strip www from URL with Nginx redirect
server {
server_name www.domain.example;
rewrite ^(.*) http://domain.example$1 permanent;
}
server {
server_name domain.example;
#The rest of your configuration goes here#
}
So you need to have TWO server codes.
Add the www to the URL with Nginx redirect
If what you need is the opposite, to redirect from domain.example to www.domain.example, you can use this:
server {
server_name domain.example;
rewrite ^(.*) http://www.domain.example$1 permanent;
}
server {
server_name www.domain.example;
#The rest of your configuration goes here#
}
As you can imagine, this is just the opposite and works the same way the first example. This way, you don't get SEO marks down, as it is complete perm redirect and move. The no WWW is forced and the directory shown!
Some of my code shown below for a better view:
server {
server_name www.google.com;
rewrite ^(.*) http://google.com$1 permanent;
}
server {
listen 80;
server_name google.com;
index index.php index.html;
####
# now pull the site from one directory #
root /var/www/www.google.com/web;
# done #
location = /favicon.ico {
log_not_found off;
access_log off;
}
}
Actually you don't even need a rewrite.
server {
#listen 80 is default
server_name www.example.com;
return 301 $scheme://example.com$request_uri;
}
server {
#listen 80 is default
server_name example.com;
## here goes the rest of your conf...
}
As my answer is getting more and more up votes but the above as well. You should never use a rewrite in this context. Why? Because nginx has to process and start a search. If you use return (which should be available in any nginx version) it directly stops execution. This is preferred in any context.
Redirect both, non-SSL and SSL to their non-www counterpart:
server {
listen 80;
listen 443 ssl;
server_name www.example.com;
ssl_certificate path/to/cert;
ssl_certificate_key path/to/key;
return 301 $scheme://example.com$request_uri;
}
server {
listen 80;
listen 443 ssl;
server_name example.com;
ssl_certificate path/to/cert;
ssl_certificate_key path/to/key;
# rest goes here...
}
The $scheme variable will only contain http if your server is only listening on port 80 (default) and the listen option does not contain the ssl keyword. Not using the variable will not gain you any performance.
Note that you need even more server blocks if you use HSTS, because the HSTS headers should not be sent over non-encrypted connections. Hence, you need unencrypted server blocks with redirects and encrypted server blocks with redirects and HSTS headers.
Redirect everything to SSL (personal config on UNIX with IPv4, IPv6, SPDY, ...):
#
# Redirect all www to non-www
#
server {
server_name www.example.com;
ssl_certificate ssl/example.com/crt;
ssl_certificate_key ssl/example.com/key;
listen *:80;
listen *:443 ssl spdy;
listen [::]:80 ipv6only=on;
listen [::]:443 ssl spdy ipv6only=on;
return 301 https://example.com$request_uri;
}
#
# Redirect all non-encrypted to encrypted
#
server {
server_name example.com;
listen *:80;
listen [::]:80;
return 301 https://example.com$request_uri;
}
#
# There we go!
#
server {
server_name example.com;
ssl_certificate ssl/example.com/crt;
ssl_certificate_key ssl/example.com/key;
listen *:443 ssl spdy;
listen [::]:443 ssl spdy;
# rest goes here...
}
I guess you can imagine other compounds with this pattern now by yourself.
More of my configs? Go here and here.
Best Practice: separate server w/ hardcoded server_name
Best practice with nginx is to use a separate server for a redirect like this (not shared with the server of your main configuration), to hardcode everything, and not use regular expressions at all.
It may also be necessary to hardcode the domains if you're using HTTPS, because you have to know upfront which certificates you'll be providing.
server {
server_name www.example.com;
return 301 $scheme://example.com$request_uri;
}
server {
server_name www.example.org;
return 301 $scheme://example.org$request_uri;
}
server {
server_name example.com example.org;
# real configuration goes here
}
Using Regular Expressions within server_name
If you have a number of sites, and don't care for the most ultimate performance, but want every single one of them to have the same policy in regards to the www. prefix, then you can use regular expressions. The best practice of using a separate server would still stand.
Note that this solution gets tricky if you use https, as you must then have a single certificate to cover all of your domain names if you want this to work properly.
non-www to www w/ regex in a dedicated single server for all sites:
server {
server_name ~^(?!www\.)(?<domain>.+)$;
return 301 $scheme://www.$domain$request_uri;
}
www to non-www w/ regex in a dedicated single server for all sites:
server {
server_name ~^www\.(?<domain>.+)$;
return 301 $scheme://$domain$request_uri;
}
www to non-www w/ regex in a dedicated server for some sites only:
It may be necessary to restrict the regex to cover only a couple of domains, then you can use something like this to only match www.example.org, www.example.com and www.subdomain.example.net:
server {
server_name ~^www\.(?<domain>(?:example\.org|example\.com|subdomain\.example\.net))$;
return 301 $scheme://$domain$request_uri;
}
Testing Regular Expressions w/ nginx
You can test that the regex works as expected with pcretest on your system, which is the exact same pcre library that your nginx will be using for regular expressions:
% pcretest
PCRE version 8.35 2014-04-04
re> #^www\.(?<domain>(?:example\.org|example\.com|subdomain\.example\.net))$#
data> test
No match
data> www.example.org
0: www.example.org
1: example.org
data> www.test.example.org
No match
data> www.example.com
0: www.example.com
1: example.com
data> www.subdomain.example.net
0: www.subdomain.example.net
1: subdomain.example.net
data> subdomain.example.net
No match
data> www.subdomain.example.net.
No match
data>
Note that you don't have to worry about trailing dots or case, as nginx already takes care of it, as per nginx server name regex when "Host" header has a trailing dot.
Sprinkle if within existing server / HTTPS:
This final solution is generally not considered to be the best practice, however, it still works and does the job.
In fact, if you're using HTTPS, then this final solution may end up easier to maintain, as you wouldn't have to copy-paste a whole bunch of ssl directives between the different server definitions, and could instead place the snippets only into the needed servers, making it easier to debug and maintain your sites.
non-www to www:
if ($host ~ ^(?!www\.)(?<domain>.+)$) {
return 301 $scheme://www.$domain$request_uri;
}
www to non-www:
if ($host ~ ^www\.(?<domain>.+)$) {
return 301 $scheme://$domain$request_uri;
}
hardcoding a single preferred domain
If you want a little bit more performance, as well as consistency between multiple domains a single server may use, it might still make sense to explicitly hardcode a single preferred domain:
if ($host != "example.com") {
return 301 $scheme://example.com$request_uri;
}
References:
http://nginx.org/r/server_name
http://nginx.org/r/return
http://nginx.org/en/docs/http/server_names.html
You may find out you want to use the same config for more domains.
Following snippet removes www before any domain:
if ($host ~* ^www\.(.*)$) {
rewrite / $scheme://$1 permanent;
}
You need two server blocks.
Put these into your config file eg /etc/nginx/sites-available/sitename
Let's say you decide to have http://example.com as the main address to use.
Your config file should look like this:
server {
listen 80;
listen [::]:80;
server_name www.example.com;
return 301 $scheme://example.com$request_uri;
}
server {
listen 80;
listen [::]:80;
server_name example.com;
# this is the main server block
# insert ALL other config or settings in this server block
}
The first server block will hold the instructions to redirect any requests with the 'www' prefix. It listens to requests for the URL with 'www' prefix and redirects.
It does nothing else.
The second server block will hold your main address — the URL you want to use. All other settings go here like root, index, location, etc. Check the default file for these other settings you can include in the server block.
The server needs two DNS A records.
Name: # IPAddress: your-ip-address (for the example.com URL)
Name: www IPAddress: your-ip-address (for the www.example.com URL)
For ipv6 create the pair of AAAA records using your-ipv6-address.
Here's how to do it for multiple www to no-www server names (I used this for subdomains):
server {
server_name
"~^www\.(sub1.example.com)$"
"~^www\.(sub2.example.com)$"
"~^www\.(sub3.example.com)$";
return 301 $scheme://$1$request_uri ;
}
I combined the best of all the simple answers, without hard-coded domains.
301 permanent redirect from non-www to www (HTTP or HTTPS):
server {
if ($host !~ ^www\.) {
rewrite ^ $scheme://www.$host$request_uri permanent;
}
# Regular location configs...
}
If you prefer non-HTTPS, non-www to HTTPS, www redirect at the same time:
server {
listen 80;
if ($host !~ ^www\.) {
rewrite ^ https://www.$host$request_uri permanent;
}
rewrite ^ https://$host$request_uri permanent;
}
This solution comes from my personal experience. We used several Amazon S3 buckets and one server for redirecting non-www to www domain names to match S3 "Host" header policy.
I used the following configuration for nginx server:
server {
listen 80;
server_name ~^(?!www\.)(?<domain>.+)$;
return 301 $scheme://www.$domain$request_uri;
}
This matches all domain names pointed to the server starting with whatever but www. and redirects to www.<domain>. In the same manner you can do opposite redirect from www to non-www.
try this
if ($host !~* ^www\.){
rewrite ^(.*)$ https://www.yoursite.example$1;
}
Other way:
Nginx no-www to www
server {
listen 80;
server_name yoursite.example;
root /path/;
index index.php;
return 301 https://www.yoursite.example$request_uri;
}
and www to no-www
server {
listen 80;
server_name www.yoursite.example;
root /path/;
index index.php;
return 301 https://yoursite.example$request_uri;
}
Redirect non-www to www
For Single Domain :
server {
server_name example.com;
return 301 $scheme://www.example.com$request_uri;
}
For All Domains :
server {
server_name "~^(?!www\.).*" ;
return 301 $scheme://www.$host$request_uri;
}
Redirect www to non-www
For Single Domain:
server {
server_name www.example.com;
return 301 $scheme://example.com$request_uri;
}
For All Domains :
server {
server_name "~^www\.(.*)$" ;
return 301 $scheme://$1$request_uri ;
}
Unique format:
server {
listen 80;
server_name "~^www\.(.*)$" ;
return 301 https://$1$request_uri ;
}
If you don't want to hardcode the domain name, you can use this redirect block. The domain without the leading www is saved as variable $domain which can be reused in the redirect statement.
server {
...
# Redirect www to non-www
if ( $host ~ ^www\.(?<domain>.+) ) {
rewrite ^/(.*)$ $scheme://$domain/$1;
}
}
REF: Redirecting a subdomain with a regular expression in nginx
location / {
if ($http_host !~ "^www.domain.example"){
rewrite ^(.*)$ $scheme://www.domain.example$1 redirect;
}
}
not sure if anyone notice it may be correct to return a 301 but browsers choke on it to doing
rewrite ^(.*)$ https://yoursite.example$1;
is faster than:
return 301 $scheme://yoursite.example$request_uri;
Ghost blog
in order to make nginx recommended method with return 301 $scheme://example.com$request_uri; work with Ghost you will need to add in your main server block:
proxy_set_header X-Real-IP $remote_addr;
proxy_set_header X-Forwarded-For $proxy_add_x_forwarded_for;
proxy_set_header Host $http_host;
proxy_set_header X-Forwarded-Proto $scheme;
proxy_set_header X-NginX-Proxy true;
proxy_pass_header X-CSRF-TOKEN;
proxy_buffering off;
proxy_redirect off;
my configuration was - Nginx + tomcat 9 + Ubuntu 20.04 + spring boot app
all answers above not working for me - also not work upstream notation in Nginx file - so I change my settings on this
thanks God for certbot - this util very helpful, it's generate base file for your site and then I added my changes - to redirect https://www.example.com, http://www.example.com to only one https://example.com
server {
if ($host = www.example.com) {
return 301 https://example.com$request_uri;
}
root /var/www/example.com/html;
index index.html index.htm index.nginx-debian.html;
server_name example.com www.example.com;
location / {
proxy_set_header X-Forwarded-For $proxy_add_x_forwarded_for;
proxy_set_header X-Real-IP $remote_addr;
proxy_set_header Host $http_host;
proxy_set_header X-Forwarded-Proto $scheme;
proxy_pass http://127.0.0.1:8080; # This is upstream name, note the variable $scheme in it
proxy_redirect off;
}
listen [::]:443 ssl ipv6only=on; # managed by Certbot
listen 443 ssl; # managed by Certbot
ssl_certificate /etc/letsencrypt/live/www.example.com/fullchain.pem; # managed by Certbot
ssl_certificate_key /etc/letsencrypt/live/www.example.com/privkey.pem; # managed by Certbot
include /etc/letsencrypt/options-ssl-nginx.conf; # managed by Certbot
ssl_dhparam /etc/letsencrypt/ssl-dhparams.pem; # managed by Certbot
}
server {
if ($host = www.example.com) {
return 301 https://example.com$request_uri;
} # managed by Certbot
if ($host = example.com) {
return 301 https://$host$request_uri;
} # managed by Certbot
listen 80;
listen [::]:80;
server_name example.com www.example.com;
return 404; # managed by Certbot
}
if ($host ~* ^www.example.com$) {
return 301 $scheme://example.com$request_uri;
}
Add CNAME with cloudflare and use this format as conf file.
server {
listen 80;
listen [::]:80;
server_name example.com www.example.com;
proxy_set_header Host $http_host;
proxy_set_header X-Real-IP $remote_addr;
proxy_set_header X-Forwarded-For $proxy_add_x_forwarded_for;
location / {
proxy_pass "http://localhost:3000/";
}}
If you are having trouble getting this working, you may need to add the IP address of your server. For example:
server {
listen XXX.XXX.XXX.XXX:80;
listen XXX.XXX.XXX.XXX:443 ssl;
ssl_certificate /var/www/example.com/web/ssl/example.com.crt;
ssl_certificate_key /var/www/example.com/web/ssl/example.com.key;
server_name www.example.com;
return 301 $scheme://example.com$request_uri;
}
where XXX.XXX.XXX.XXX is the IP address (obviously).
Note: ssl crt and key location must be defined to properly redirect https requests
Don't forget to restart nginx after making the changes:
service nginx restart