Hi,
I’ve noticed something quite odd, but I don’t know if the problem come from Linux itself or nginx…
In order to grant nginx access to a directory let say your static
see: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/16808813/nginx-serve-static-file-and-got-403-forbidden
These parent directories “/”, “/root”, “/root/downloads” should give the execute(x) permission to ‘www-data’ or ‘nobody’. i.e.
but it seem not only the direct parent need to be given XX5 but all the chain
for example
example
└── sub1
└── sub2
└── static
it seem you need to set allow others
to read and execute 5
all the parents example, sub1, sub2
Why is that !?? I’ve found it so akward and unsecure !
is there a workaround ?
Thanks.
Thank you all !
Indeed setting
execute
perm on example, sub1, sub2, staticThe program/user have now access to the directory.
In order words all the parents directory need at least
execute
in order to have access in the targeted directory…Now I gave 751 for static. Meaning than others (here nginx) cannot list the files within. But never the less it works
the static files are appearing when requested (HTTP) but forbidding nginx to list the directory is changing something ? (performance/security)
Thanks