I'm used to using Apache with mod_proxy_html, and am trying to achieve something similar with NGINX. The specific use case is that I have an admin UI running in Tomcat on port 8080 on a server at the root context:
http://localhost:8080/
I need to surface this on port 80, but I have other contexts on the NGINX server running on this host, so want to try and access this at:
http://localhost:80/admin/
I was hoping that the following super simple server block would do it, but it doesn't quite:
server {
listen 80;
server_name screenly.local.akana.com;
location /admin/ {
proxy_pass http://localhost:8080/;
}
}
The problem is that the returned content (html) contains URLs to scripts and style info that is all accessed at the root context, so I need to get these URLs rewritten to start with /admin/ instead of /.
How do I do this in NGINX?
You may also need the following directive to be set before the first "sub_filter" for backend-servers with data compression:
Otherwise it may not work. For your example it will look like:
We should first read the documentation on proxy_pass carefully and fully.
The URI passed to upstream server is determined based on whether "proxy_pass" directive is used with URI or not. Trailing slash in proxy_pass directive means that URI is present and equal to
/
. Absense of trailing slash means hat URI is absent.Proxy_pass with URI:
With the above, there's the following proxy:
Basically,
/some_dir/
gets replaced by/
to change the request path from/some_dir/some_subdir/some_file
to/some_subdir/some_file
.Proxy_pass without URI:
With the second (no trailing slash): the proxy goes like this:
Basically, the full original request path gets passed on without changes.
So, in your case, it seems you should just drop the trailing slash to get what you want.
Caveat
Note that automatic rewrite only works if you don't use variables in proxy_pass. If you use variables, you should do rewrite yourself:
There are other cases where rewrite wouldn't work, that's why reading documentation is a must.
Edit
Reading your question again, it seems I may have missed that you just want to edit the html output.
For that, you can use the sub_filter directive. Something like ...
Basically, the string you want to replace and the replacement string
You can use the following nginx configuration example: