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I have an nginx configuration specific to a project I'm currently working on (Django, to be precise).

It looks like the "right" way to start nginx on Ubuntu is

sudo /etc/init.d/nginx start

However, I want to supply a custom configuration file. Normally I'd do this in the following way:

sudo nginx -c /my/project/config/nginx.conf

Looking at the init.d/nginx file, it doesn't look like there the start command passes in any arguments, so I can't do

sudo /etc/init.d/nginx start -c /my/project/config/nginx.conf

What's the best way to solve my problem?

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  • try sudo /etc/init.d/nginx -s start -c /my/project/config/nginx.conf
    – Aamir Rind
    Jan 9, 2013 at 22:33
  • I get the standard init.d error message: Usage: nginx {start|stop|restart|reload|force-reload|status|configtest}
    – mallyvai
    Jan 9, 2013 at 23:22
  • You can hardcode the custom configuration path in the /etc/init.d/nginx just edit the variable NGINX_CONF_FILE="/my/project/config/nginx.conf". Then you can just do sudo /etc/init.d/nginx start to start it. I am not sure though if this is a good way.
    – Aamir Rind
    Jan 9, 2013 at 23:42
  • Thanks for the help, but I'm hoping there's a better way - I'd prefer not to have to patch a builtin like this directly. Unfortunately this just seems like an init.d limitation...
    – mallyvai
    Jan 10, 2013 at 4:46

1 Answer 1

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init.d is not the right supervisor to use on Ubuntu anymore, you should use Upstart. Put this in /etc/init/nginx.conf and you will be able to start/stop it with sudo start nginx and sudo stop nginx:

description "nginx http daemon"
author "George Shammas"

start on (filesystem and net-device-up IFACE=lo)
stop on runlevel [!2345]

env DAEMON=/usr/local/nginx/sbin/nginx -c /my/project/config/nginx.conf
env PID=/usr/local/nginx/logs/nginx.pid

expect fork
respawn
respawn limit 10 5

pre-start script
    $DAEMON -t
    if [ $? -ne 0 ]
            then exit $?
    fi
end script

exec $DAEMON

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