Hello! On Thu, Feb 23, 2023 at 08:13:54AM -0500, Saint Michael wrote:
> Suppose that my default html file forn a location is xyz.html, but there > are hundreds. What is the canonical way to specify that and only that file > for a / {}. Locations are for a given URI prefix, not for a particular file. Locations define a configuration to be used for matching requests. See http://nginx.org/r/location for the detailed description of the location directive. When mapping requests to the files, nginx simply concatenates the document root, as defined by the "root" directive, and URI from the requests. For example, given "/path/to/html" root and a request to "/xyz.html", nginx will return the "/path/to/html/xyz.html" file. If you want nginx to return only the particular file to all requests matched by the location, the most simple approach would be to use a rewrite (http://nginx.org/r/rewrite) to change the URI: location / { rewrite ^ /xyz.html break; } Note though that this is not going to be a good solution to the issues with likely non-existing files you are facing. Rather, this will make such issues impossible to debug, and is generally not recommended - unless you have good reasons to implement something like this. Instead, I would recommend using normal request processing and let nginx to normally return files under the document root and reject requests to non-existing files. Hope this helps. -- Maxim Dounin http://mdounin.ru/ _______________________________________________ nginx mailing list nginx@nginx.org https://mailman.nginx.org/mailman/listinfo/nginx