7

I have simple configuration file that is used to server custom 503 error page at a time of maintenance. The relevant part is this:

server {
    listen      80 default;
    root        /usr/share/nginx/html;
    server_name example.com;

    location / {
        if (-f $document_root/503.json) {
            return 503;
        }
    }

    # error 503 redirect to 503.json
    error_page 503 @maintenance;
    location @maintenance {
        rewrite ^(.*)$ /503.json break;
    }
}

The problem is Nginx figures out that any request resolves in a static file and any POST, PUT and DELETE requests get 405 (method not allowed) response.

So the question is: how do I tell Nginx to serve my page for any HTTP method?

1
  • 1
    Did you come up with a solution to this? Mar 25, 2014 at 10:53

3 Answers 3

9

I ran into this today. It seems the issue is due to nginx (like most servers) not letting you POST to a static file.

The solution is to capture 405 errors in your @503 location block, serving the maintenance page. In addition, you will have to enable @recursiveerrorpages@, since you are first, intentionally, throwing a 503 error, and then the user is throwing a 405 by posting to your static file:

recursive_error_pages on;

if (-f $document_root/system/maintenance.html) {
  return 503;
}

error_page 404 /404.html;
error_page 500 502 504 /500.html;
error_page 503 @503;
location @503 {

  error_page 405 = /system/maintenance.html;

  # Serve static assets if found.
  if (-f $request_filename) {
    break;
  }

  rewrite ^(.*)$ /system/maintenance.html break;
}

Source: https://www.onehub.com/blog/2009/03/06/rails-maintenance-pages-done-right/

4
  • the status code returned to the post request in this case will still be a 405 in this case though, correct? Jun 1, 2017 at 2:16
  • @MohamedHafez nope, it should return a 503. It's explained fully in the linked source article, but from memory it's redirecting to the maintenance page and then explicitly throwing a 503
    – Jay
    Jun 2, 2017 at 2:12
  • Sadly this also redirects to the maintenance page on the browser url for me. I've been trying all day to rewrite and not redirect. Aug 13, 2018 at 23:10
  • It threw Invalid argument exception for error_page. I added status redirect, as in nginx manual: error_page 405 =503 /mymaintenancepage.html; and then it worked fine. Sep 23, 2020 at 10:58
0

Maybe try forcing the 405 requests to be the actual URI:

error_page 405 = $uri;
2
  • Not sure what you mean. Actual URI results in 405. I want 503.
    – cababunga
    Apr 24, 2013 at 0:31
  • See this if it works error_page 405 =503 /50x.html;
    – Salem
    Dec 29, 2014 at 21:06
0

Don't know why, but my POST requset only get 405 when using named location.

so I change @ to /, with internal, then GET/POST will get 503 with json.

error_page 503 /503;
location /503
{
    internal;

    root /path/to/config;
    try_files /503.json =404;
}

internal doc here

I am on nginx/1.24.0

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