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Web server and mail proxy server

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What's New in the Angie 1.9 Web Server (an nginx fork) and What to Expect from 1.10?

Level of difficultyEasy
Reading time8 min
Views965

You may have already read in the news that on the eve of Cosmonautics Day, a new stable release of Angie 1.9.0 was released, an nginx fork that continues to be developed by the team of former nginx developers. Approximately every quarter, we try to release new stable versions and delight users with numerous improvements. This release is no exception, but it's one thing to read a dry changelog and quite another to get to know the functionality in more detail, to learn how and in which cases it can be applied.

The list of innovations that we will discuss in more detail:

— Saving shared memory zones with cache index to disk;
— Persistent switching to a backup group of proxied servers;
— 0-RTT in the stream module;
— New busy status for proxied servers in the built-in statistics API;
— Improvements to the ACME module, which allows automatic obtaining of Let's Encrypt TLS certificates and others;
— Caching TLS certificates when using variables.

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In simple terms about a simple Nginx Unit

Level of difficultyEasy
Reading time8 min
Views2.5K

This article describes the new Nginx Unit web server. In it you can learn more about the web server itself, its installation and configuration: how to use listeners, routing, how to install TLS certificates. The article will show how easy it is to work with it and that huge configs are slowly becoming a thing of the past.

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How I gave my old laptop second life

Reading time16 min
Views3K

17-19 min read

Hi y'all, my name is Labertte and I use Arch btw.
Probably like every other Linux user, I'd like to buy a ThinkPad, put some lightweight distribution like Arch or Gentoo on it, and then go to Starbucks, get a soy latte and tell everyone that I use "linux". But I decided to go a little different route and give a chance to my old laptop that I was using about five or seven years ago.

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Chronicle of Rambler Group and Nginx confrontation (updated on 23 Dec, 12 p.m.)

Reading time3 min
Views6.6K


On December 12, it became known from Nginx's employee Twitter that the company's office was searched due to the criminal case under Article 146 of the Criminal Code of the Russian Federation 'Violation of Author's and Neighboring Rights'. The claim belong to Rambler Group was, although formally the complaintant is Lynwood Investments CY Ltd, to which the rights were transferred. The last-mentioned is related to the co-owner of Rambler Group, Alexander Mamut.

The point of the claim: Igor started working on Nginx as an employee of Rambler and only after the tool became popular he founded a separate company and attracted investments.

Here is how the events unfolded.
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Nginx's office is being searched due to Rambler Group's lawsuit. The complaintant press service confirmed the suit

Reading time5 min
Views17K
According to one of the employees Nginx's Moscow office is being searched due to the criminal case brought by Rambler Group (the official response of the company's press office to this issue and confirmation of claims against Nginx is below). The photo of the search warrant is provided as the evidence of the criminal case initiated on December 4, 2019 under Article 146 of the Criminal Code of the Russian Federation 'Violation of Author's and Neighboring Rights'.

Nginx search warrant


It is assumed the complaintant is Rambler, and the defendant is still an 'unidentified group of persons', and in the long run — the founder of Nginx, Igor Sysoyev.

The point of the claim: Igor started working on Nginx as an employee of Rambler and only after the tool became popular he founded a separate company and attracted investments.

It is not clear why Rambler revised its 'property' only 15 years later.