32

I noticed my install of nginx has three folders called

etc/nginx/sites-available
etc/nginx/sites-enabled
etc/nginx/conf.d

Do I really need these if I just want to work directly in the etc/nginx/nginx.conf file and remove the include lines that include these items in nginx.conf? Are these directories used for anything else that would mess things up if I delete them?

3
  • 3
    Although already answered, I see this a lot and often wonder myself, why bother with this structure? This is a Debian (i.e. Ubuntu) convention. In other non-Debian distributions you will not find sites-available/enabled which is to closely mimic the way Apache does things. To say this is a best practice is arguable. Plenty of good reads around behind this topic e.g. serverfault.com/a/870709
    – userabuser
    Dec 16, 2018 at 9:18
  • 2
    Note Arun's answer is the most up to date and IMHO should be the accepted answer in 2021.
    – Boaz
    Jul 10, 2021 at 10:02
  • As noted above, according to the official (and freely available) NGINX Cookbook from 2022 states that the sites-enable & sites-available "convention is deprecated". Arun's answer has the complete quote, along with the suggestion of what to use instead.
    – toraritte
    Apr 12, 2023 at 15:06

4 Answers 4

29

No, they are not needed if you define your server blocks properly in nginx.conf, but it's highly suggested. As you noticed, they are only used because of the include /etc/nginx/sites-enabled/*; in nginx.conf.

For curiosity, is there a reason why you do not want to use them? They are very useful; easier to add new sites, disabling sites, etc. Rather than having one large config file. This is a kind of a best practice of nginx folder layout.

1
  • 4
    I guess because I like to keep things simple. I am not hosting a ton of sites. Only a couple. Dec 23, 2016 at 15:37
21

As the (freely available) NGINX Cookbook states under section "1.5 Key Files, Directories, and Commands":

The /etc/nginx/conf.d/ directory contains the default HTTP server configuration file. Files in this directory ending in .conf are included in the top-level http block from within the /etc/nginx/nginx.conf file. It’s best practice to utilize include statements and organize your configuration in this way to keep your configuration files concise.

In some package repositories, this folder is named sites-enabled, and configuration files are linked from a folder named site-available; this convention is deprecated.

With that said, I couldn't find any deprecation notice in the NGINX docs. As the author also carefully points out, this convention may only be a thing "in some package repositories", and not something universal. (See @Robin's comment below, for example.) This NGINX sub-reddit post was also elucidating.

3
  • 2
    I was looking for this EXACT answer - thank you.
    – E.Z.
    Jan 4, 2021 at 0:19
  • 5
    In other words, according to this, add a your-site.conf under the /etc/nginx./conf.d folder, instead of using the deprected sites-enabled/site-available pattern.
    – Boaz
    Jul 10, 2021 at 9:58
  • On CentOS 7 at the time of writing despite nginx being installed, conf.d is empty and only nginx.conf exists in /etc/nginx.
    – Robin
    Aug 1, 2022 at 15:58
17

Important information:

If you opt for the sites-enabled/sites-available pattern, make sure to exclusively modify files in the sites-available directory.

Never edit files inside the sites-enabled directory, otherwise you can have problems if your editor runs out of memory or, for any reason, it receives a SIGHUP or SIGTERM.

For example: if you are using nano to edit the file sites-enabled/default and it runs out of memory or, for any reason, it receives a SIGHUP or SIGTERM, then nano will create an emergency file called default.save, inside the sites-enabled directory. So, there will be an extra file inside the sites-enabled directory. That will prevent Apache or NGINX to start. If your site was working, it will not be anymore. You will have a hard time until you find out, in the logs, something related to the default.save file and, then, remove it.

In the example above, if you were editing the file inside the sites-available directory, nothing bad would have happened. The file sites-available/default.save would have been created, but it wouldn't do any harm inside the sites-available directory.

1
1

It is not a must, but a best practise if you host more than one sites on your box.

It will be easier to manage by keep http context and common directives (such as ssl_dhparam, ssl_ciphers, or even gzip settings, etc.) on the nginx.conf so that it applied across all sites.

Keep site-specific server context (such as ssl-certificate, location directives, etc.) at etc/nginx/sites-available/ and name the configuration file as your-domain.conf. The file in etc/nginx/sites-enabled can be just a link to the file to the etc/nginx/sites-available.

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.