![]() ![]() All we need to do is provide a different site configuration, and COPY that into the resulting nginx image. This way we could re-use the majority of the nginx configuration for other projects - WordPress, Node JS apps, Laravel, Rails, whatever. We covered how it's a good idea to separate nginx from PHP. ![]() However, yet again, things get a little more complicated than you might first expect. Then we saw how we could add in a nginx web server container, which would accept incoming requests and then forward them on to somewhere that really handled the PHP part of the job. Symfony2.3 Beginners Tutorial - Part 1 - Getting Setup (1080p) ![]()
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