I have experience with nginx but it's always been pre-installed for me (via VPS.net pre-configured image). I really like what it does for me, and now I'm trying to install it on my own server with apt-get. This is a fairly fresh Debian 5 install. I have few extra packages installed but they're all .deb's, no manual compiling or anything crazy going on.
Apache is already installed but I disabled it. I did apt-get install nginx and that worked fine. Changed the config around a bit for my needs, although the same problem I'm about to describe happens even with the default config.
It took me a while to figure out that the default debian package for nginx doesn't spawn fastcgi processes automatically. That's pretty lame, but I figured out how to do that with this script, which I found posted on many different web sites:
#!/bin/bash
## ABSOLUTE path to the PHP binary
PHPFCGI="/usr/bin/php5-cgi"
## tcp-port to bind on
FCGIPORT="9000"
## IP to bind on
FCGIADDR="127.0.0.1"
## number of PHP children to spawn
PHP_FCGI_CHILDREN=10
## number of request before php-process will be restarted
PHP_FCGI_MAX_REQUESTS=1000
# allowed environment variables sperated by spaces
ALLOWED_ENV="ORACLE_HOME PATH USER"
## if this script is run as root switch to the following user
USERID=www-data
################## no config below this line
if test x$PHP_FCGI_CHILDREN = x; then
PHP_FCGI_CHILDREN=5
fi
ALLOWED_ENV="$ALLOWED_ENV PHP_FCGI_CHILDREN"
ALLOWED_ENV="$ALLOWED_ENV PHP_FCGI_MAX_REQUESTS"
ALLOWED_ENV="$ALLOWED_ENV FCGI_WEB_SERVER_ADDRS"
if test x$UID = x0; then
EX="/bin/su -m -c \"$PHPFCGI -q -b $FCGIADDR:$FCGIPORT\" $USERID"
else
EX="$PHPFCGI -b $FCGIADDR:$FCGIPORT"
fi
echo $EX
# copy the allowed environment variables
E=
for i in $ALLOWED_ENV; do
E="$E $i=${!i}"
done
# clean environment and set up a new one
nohup env - $E sh -c "$EX" &> /dev/null &
When I do a "ps -A | grep php5-cgi", I see the 10 processes running, that should be ready to listen.
But when I try to view a web page via nginx, I just get a 502 bad gateway error.
After futzing around a bit, I tried telneting to 127.0.0.1 9000 (fastcgi is listening on port 9000, and nginx is configured to talk to that port), but it just immediately closes the connection.
This makes me think the problem is with fastcgi, but I'm not sure what I can do to test it. It may just be closing the connection because it's not getting fed any data to process, but it closes immediately so that makes me think otherwise.
So... any advice? I can't figure it out. It doesn't help that it's 1AM, but I'm going crazy here!
On my server I use nginx+fcgi as well.
My solution isn't foolproof but at least works. I have this script which uses spawn-fcgi and php5-cgi under /etc/init.d/
and the related nginx conf is this:
and the fastcgi.conf contains the following
Hope this helps :)
PS: With this setup I had an issue where the cgi daemon would die every now and then. I worked around this issue by executing this in a cronjob every 5 minutes:
I'm not an expert on this at all. In fact I saw your post because I had the same problem. HOwever, I seem to have been able to get it to work and what I did was change the USERID (www-data) from the /etc/init.d/php-fastcgi file to the user I was currently running. Sorry if this doesn't help or that I can't explain any further, but I thought I'd post it in case it is relevant.
Try this:
and then change
to