# This tells Nginx to cache open file handles, "not found" errors, metadata about files and their permissions, etc. # # The upside of this is that Nginx can immediately begin sending data when a popular file is requested, # and will also know to immediately send a 404 if a file is missing on disk, and so on. # # However, it also means that the server won't react immediately to changes on disk, which may be undesirable. # # In the below configuration, inactive files are released from the cache after 20 seconds, whereas # active (recently requested) files are re-validated every 30 seconds. # # Descriptors will not be cached unless they are used at least 2 times within 20 seconds (the inactive time). # # A maximum of the 1000 most recently used file descriptors can be cached at any time. # # Production servers with stable file collections will definitely want to enable the cache. open_file_cache max=1000 inactive=20s; open_file_cache_valid 30s; open_file_cache_min_uses 2; open_file_cache_errors on;