3

In my production server with SSL / https installed, my facebook share button is not showing.

The same share button is visible at my test server (http only) using the same code base.

I think this is caused by nginx redirect all traffic from http to https setting, however I'm not able to fix it

My facebook share button code base

<div id="fb_share_id" class="fb-share-button" data-href="http://www.example.com/hi.html" data-type="button"></div> 

<script>
window.fbAsyncInit = function() {
FB.init({
  appId      : 'xxxxxxxxxxxx',
  xfbml      : true,
  version    : 'v2.5'
});      
};

(function(d, s, id){
 var js, fjs = d.getElementsByTagName(s)[0];
 if (d.getElementById(id)) {return;}
 js = d.createElement(s); js.id = id;
 js.src = "//connect.facebook.net/en_US/sdk.js";
 fjs.parentNode.insertBefore(js, fjs);
 }(document, 'script', 'facebook-jssdk'));

</script>

and my nginx rewrite rule

upstream example_app_server {
server unix:/webapps/example/run/gunicorn.sock fail_timeout=0;
}

server {
listen 80;

server_name example.com;
return 301 https://$server_name$request_uri;
}

server {
server_name www.example.com;
return 301 $scheme://example.com$request_uri;
}

server {


listen 443 default_server ssl;
server_name example.com;
server_name www.example.com;
ssl on; 
.
.
}
2
  • 3
    A few ideas: 1) change the data-href link to also use https 2) make sure the facebook sdk gets loaded (view the network tab of your browsers dev tools) 3) look for errors in the browser console and post them here
    – Martin
    Jan 7, 2016 at 21:13
  • 99% that this is not related to nginx since it all happens in JS and JS goes to FB directly. As the comment above mentioned, check out the console, see if there are errors. For instance – wrong Facebook app ID; JavaScript error somewhere else in the code that breaks all JS on the page. Jan 10, 2016 at 3:37

1 Answer 1

0

If you are serving both www.example.com and example.com domains in server_name directive it has no sense you perform the www. to non-www. redirection, just remove this rewrite rule:

# This is NO NEEDED, as long as your server ALSO process www.example.com as server_name
# server {
#   server_name www.example.com;
#   return 301 $scheme://example.com$request_uri;
#}

server {


  listen 443 default_server ssl;
  server_name example.com www.example.com; # PUT both domains into unique directive
  requests arrives
  ssl on; 
  .
  .
}

Otherwise, in case you actually want to redirect all www. uris to non-www. uris then just change data-href="http://example.com/hi.html" on your html and change server_name directive:

server {


  listen 443 default_server ssl;
  server_name example.com;
  # server_name www.example.com; # This is NO NEEDED, only example.com requests arrives
  ssl on; 
  .
  .
}

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.