2.4 KiB
Context
The site is statically generated (Astro) and deployed behind nginx in Docker. Users can browse to /videos, /podcast, and /about, but direct navigation to these paths is currently resulting in a 404 in the deployed environment.
The static output contains directory-based pages (/videos/index.html, /podcast/index.html, /about/index.html). Some nginx configurations resolve directory indexes only for requests ending with / (e.g., /videos/) and may 404 for the no-trailing-slash path (/videos) unless explicitly handled.
Goals / Non-Goals
Goals:
- Ensure
/videos,/podcast, and/aboutresolve successfully (200) in the nginx/Docker deployment. - Ensure requests to both the trailing slash and non-trailing slash forms work predictably.
- Keep behavior consistent with the SEO spec (indexable pages remain distinct; no SPA-style fallback masking real 404s).
Non-Goals:
- Changing site IA or page content.
- Introducing a client-side router fallback (SPA rewrite) that would hide missing pages.
Decisions
1) Fix nginx static routing for directory index pages
Decision: Update nginx try_files to include $uri/index.html so requests like /videos resolve to /videos/index.html when present.
Rationale: This explicitly supports directory index pages without requiring a redirect, and prevents the common 404 case when the request does not include a trailing slash.
Alternatives considered:
- Redirect
/videos->/videos/: acceptable, but adds an extra hop and needs per-route rules or more complex logic. - Rewrite all unknown paths to
/index.html: not acceptable; would mask real 404s and break the semantics of distinct indexable pages.
2) Add a small verification step as part of deployment
Decision: Validate the deployed container serves /videos, /podcast, and /about as 200 in addition to verifying the build output includes the expected index.html files.
Rationale: This catches config regressions and ensures the fix applies to the real serving stack.
Risks / Trade-offs
- [Path collisions] -> Using
$uri/index.htmlcould cause unexpected resolution if both a file and a directory exist. Mitigation: keep route structure simple and prefer one form. - [Platform differences] -> Non-nginx deployments might still behave differently. Mitigation: document that the Docker/nginx deploy is canonical and ensure other hosts use equivalent rules.