Am Sa., 17. Aug. 2019 um 20:04 Uhr schrieb Francis Daly <[email protected]>: > """ > The path to a file is constructed from the file parameter according to > the root and alias directives. It is possible to check directory’s > existence by specifying a slash at the end of a name, e.g. “$uri/”. > """ > > $foo does not end in slash, so try_files looks for a file of that > (expanded) name, and fails to find it. > > $foo/ does end in slash, so try_files looks for a directory of that > (expanded) name, and finds it and serves it (which involves a > subrequest/internal redirect). >
Thank you for your answer, Francis. I've read the quoted documentation about try_files before. That it searches for an directory with $uri/ . I did not understand that it isn't about the content of the variable, but only about the appended slash. Thank you. What I still don't understand is how the existence of an directory results in subrequest/internal redirect. Is that documented somewhere? Have a good Sunday. Regards Maik Beckmann PS: It has been years since I've used mailing lists. I do not trust GMail to handle it properly nowadays. It used to "just work". Sorry if I mess up. _______________________________________________ nginx mailing list [email protected] http://mailman.nginx.org/mailman/listinfo/nginx
