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Oct 17 2015
Oct 17

A little over a year ago the ActiveLAMP website had undergone a major change -- we made the huge decision of moving away from using Drupal to manage its content in favor of building it as a static HTML site using Jekyll, hosted on Amazon S3. Not only did this extremely simplify our development stack, it also trimmed down our server requirements to the very bare minimum. Now, we are just hosting everything on a file storage server like it's 1993.

A few months ago we identified the need to restructure our URL schemes as part of an ongoing SEO campaign. As easy as that sounds, this, however, necessitates the implementation of 301 redirects from the older URL scheme to their newer, more SEO-friendly versions.

I'm gonna detail how I managed to (1) implement these redirects quite easily using an nginx service acting as a proxy, and (2) achieve parity between our local and production environments while keeping everything light-weight with the help of Docker.

Nginx vs Amazon S3 Redirects

S3 is a file storage service offered by AWS that not only allows you to store files but also allows you to host static websites in conjunction with Route 53. Although S3 gives you the ability to specify redirects, you'll need to use S3-specific configuration and routines. This alone wouldn't be ideal because not only would it tie us to S3 by the hips, but it is not a methodology that we could apply to any other environment (i.e. testing and dev environments on our local network and machines). For these reasons, I opted to use nginx as a very thin reverse proxy to accomplish the job.

Configuring Nginx

Rather than compiling the list of redirects manually, I wrote a tiny Jekyll plugin that can do it faster and more reliably. The plugin allows me to specify certain things within the main Jekyll configuration file and it will generate the proxy.conf file for me:



nginx:
    proxy_host: ></span>;
    proxy_port: 80
    from_format: "/:year/:month/:day/:title/"
    
    redirects:
        - { from: "^/splash(.*)", to: "/$1" type: redirect }

With this in place, I am able to generate the proxy.conf by simply issuing this command:

> jekyll nginx_config > proxy.conf

This command will produce a proxy.conf file which will look like this:




rewrite ^/2008/09/21/drupalcampla\-revision\-control\-presentation/?(\?.*)?$ /blog/drupal/drupalcampla-revision-control-presentation$1 permanent;




rewrite ^/blog/development/aysnchronous\-php\-with\-message\-queues/?(\?.*)?$ /blog/development/asynchronous-php-with-message-queues/$1 permanent;


location / {
	proxy_set_header Host ;
	proxy_set_header X-Real-IP $remote_addr;
	proxy_set_header X-Forwarded-For $proxy_add_x_forwarded_for;
	proxy_pass http://:80;
}

You probably noticed that this is not a complete nginx configuration. However all that is need to be done is to define a server directive which will import this file:



server {
    listen 80;
    include /etc/nginx/proxy.conf;
}

Here we have an nginx proxy listening on port 80 that knows how to redirect old URLs to the new ones and pass on any request to the S3 bucket on AWS.

From this point, I was able to change the DNS records on our domain to point to the nginx proxy service instead of pointing directly at S3.

Check out the documentation for more ways of specifying redirects and more advanced usage.

Docker

Spinning up the proxy locally is a breeze with the help of Docker. Doing this in Vagrant and a provisioner would require a lot of boilerplate and code. With Docker, everything (with the exception of the config file that is automatically generated), is under 10 lines!

The Dockerfile

Here I am using the official nginx image straight from DockerHub but added some minor modifications:



FROM nginx


RUN rm /etc/nginx/conf.d/default.conf


ADD server.conf /etc/nginx/conf.d/
ADD proxy.conf /etc/nginx/

The build/nginx directory will contain everything the nginx proxy will need: the server.conf that you saw from the previous section, and the proxy.conf file which was generated by the jekyll nginx_config command.

Automating it with Grunt

Since we are using generator-jekyllrb, a Yeoman generator for Jekyll sites which uses Grunt to run a gamut of various tasks, I just had to write a grunt proxy task which does all the needed work when invoked:



...

grunt.initConfig({
    ...
    local_ip: process.env.LOCAL_IP,
    shell: {
        nginx_config: {
            command: 'jekyll nginx_config --proxy_host=192.168.0.3
            --proxy_port=8080 --config=_config.yml,_config.build.yml --source=app > build/nginx/proxy.conf'
        }
        docker_build: {
            command: 'docker build -t jekyll-proxy build/nginx'
        },
        docker_run: {
            command: 'docker run -d -p 80:80 jekyll-proxy'
        }
    },
    ...
});

...

grunt.registerTask('proxy', [
      'shell:nginx_config',
      'shell:docker_build',
      'shell:docker_run'
]);

This requires grunt-shell

With this in place, running grunt proxy will prepare the configuration, build the image, and run the proxy on http://192.168.99.100 where 192.168.99.100 is the address to the Docker host VM on my machine.

Note that this is a very simplified version of the actual Grunt task config that we actually use which just serves to illustrate the meager list of commands that is required to get the proxy configured and running.

I have set up a GitHub repository that replicates this set-up plus the actual Grunt task configuration we use that adds more logic around things like an auto-rebuilding the Docker image, cleaning up of stale Docker processes, configuration for different build parameters for use in production, etc. You can find it here: bezhermoso/jekyll-nginx-proxy-with-docker-demo.

About Drupal Sun

Drupal Sun is an Evolving Web project. It allows you to:

  • Do full-text search on all the articles in Drupal Planet (thanks to Apache Solr)
  • Facet based on tags, author, or feed
  • Flip through articles quickly (with j/k or arrow keys) to find what you're interested in
  • View the entire article text inline, or in the context of the site where it was created

See the blog post at Evolving Web

Evolving Web