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Nginx configuration for running Redmine

Introduction

This is an example configuration from running Redmine using nginx as a HTTP reverse proxy to thin.

There's nothing particularly fancy or oblique about this
configuration. In fact, getting `thin` to work as it should is 80%
of the problem.

General Features

  1. Regular HTTP and HTTPS configurations.

  2. Lightweight.

  3. IPv6 and IPv4 support.

  4. Usage of the open files cache (inode search) for speeding up static asset delivery.

  5. Support for X-Frame-Options HTTP header to avoid Clickjacking attacks.

  6. Use of Strict Transport Security for enhanced security. It forces during the specified period for the configured domain to be contacted only over HTTPS. Requires a modern browser to be of use, i.e., Chrome/Chromium, Firefox 4 or Firefox with NoScript.

  7. DoS prevention with a low number of connections by client allowed: 32. This number can be adjusted as you see fit.

  8. Limitation of allowed HTTP methods. Out of the box only GET, HEAD and POSTare allowed.

HTTP allowed methods made to measure

For a standard redmine install there's no need for any method besides GET, HEAD and POST. The allowed methods are enumerated in the file map_block_http_methods.conf.

If your site uses/provide web services then you must add the methods you need to the list. For example if you want to allow PUT then do:

   map $request_method $not_allowed_method {
       default 1;
       GET 0;
       HEAD 0;
       POST 0;
       PUT 0;
   }

Note that this enables PUT for all locations and clients. If you need a finer control than use the limit_except directive and enumerate the client IPs that are allowed to use the extra methods like PUT.

IPv6 and IPv4

The configuration of the example vhosts uses separate sockets for IPv6 and IPv4. This way is simpler for those not (yet) having IPv6 support to disable it by commenting out the listen directive with the ipv6only=on parameter.

Note that the IPv6 address uses an IP stolen from the IPv6 Wikipedia page. You must replace the indicated address by your address.

Installation

Redmine from Debian

The installation procedure assumes that you install redmine from Debian unstable. The reason why I recommend installing from unstable is that by doing so you get the latest version of redmine.

You must also install one of the following persistence layer backends:

Thin from Debian

Thin provides the backend that receives requests from Nginx and forwards them to redmine.

We're also installing thin from debian unstable.

Howto

  1. Choose the mirror that is nearest to you from the list.

    also for the above referenced persistence layer (redmine-sqlite, redmine-mysql or redmine-pgsql).

    Install them:

    aptitude install -t unstable redmine

    Here were using the mysql backend.

    aptitude install -t unstable redmine-mysql

    You'll have to configure redmine.

  2. Install thin.

    aptitude -t unstable install thin

  3. Install Nginx if you don't have it already installed.

  4. Configure thin.

    thin config --config /tmp/redmine.yml --chdir /usr/share/redmine --environment production --socket /var/run/redmine/sockets/thin.sock --daemonize --log /var/log/thin/redmine.log --pid /var/run/thin/redmine.pid --user www-data --group www-data --servers 1
    

    Here we're configuring thin to run with one server, to run as a daemon (in the background), to log at /var/log/thin/redmine.log to write the PID file at /var/run/thin/redmine.pid to create the listeninx UNIX sockets at /var/run/redmine/sockets to run with user and group www-data and to run the rails app (redmine) in a production setup.

    Move the config file to the final location:

    mv /tmp/redmine.yml /etc/thin1.8
    

    Create and fix the permissions of the sockets directory.

    mkdir -p /var/run/redmine/sockets
    
    chown www-data.www-data /var/run/redmine/sockets
    
  5. Launch thin:

    service thin start
    

    You should see the socket that was created, ls /var/run/redmine/sockets:

    srwxrwxrwx 1 www-data www-data 0 Abr 11 15:42 thin.0.sock

  6. Move the old /etc/nginx directory to /etc/nginx.old.

  7. Clone the git repository from github:

    git clone https://github.com/perusio/redmine-nginx.git

  8. Edit the sites-available/projects.example.com.conf or the secure.projects.example.com.conf (if using SSL) configuration file to suit your requirements. Namely replacing example.com with your domain and also dealing with IPv6 configuration.

  9. Create the /etc/nginx/sites-enabled directory and enable the virtual host using one of the methods described below.

    Note that if you're using the nginx_ensite script described below it creates the /etc/nginx/sites-enabled directory if it doesn't exist the first time you run it for enabling a site.

  10. Reload Nginx:

    service nginx reload

  11. Configure the mail setup for Redmine as described in the wiki.

  12. Restart thin.

    service thin restart
    
  13. Done. You can now login to your redmine site using the user and pass admin. The first thing to do is change them to something else.

Enabling and Disabling Virtual Hosts

I've created a shell script nginx_ensite that lives here on github for quick enabling and disabling of virtual hosts.

If you're not using that script then you have to manually create the symlinks from sites-enabled to sites-available. Only the virtual hosts configured in sites-enabled will be available for Nginx to serve.

Getting the latest Nginx packaged for Debian or Ubuntu

I maintain a debian repository with the latest version of Nginx. This is packaged for Debian unstable or testing. The instructions for using the repository are presented on this page.

It may work or not on Ubuntu. Since Ubuntu seems to appreciate more finding semi-witty names for their releases instead of making clear what's the status of the software included, meaning. Is it stable? Is it testing? Is it unstable? The package may work with your currently installed environment or not. I don't have the faintest idea which release to advise. So you're on your own. Generally the APT machinery will sort out for you any dependencies issues that might exist.

Monitoring nginx

I use Monit for supervising the nginx daemon. Here's my configuration for nginx.

Caveat emptor

You should always test the configuration with nginx -t to see if everything is correct. Only after a successful should you reload nginx. On Debian and any of its derivatives you can also test the configuration by invoking the init script as: /etc/init.d/nginx testconfig.

My other nginx configs on github

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