There is a good chance that every HTTP request you have made today passed through NGINX at some point. It might have been serving a static file, forwarding your request to a backend application, terminating TLS, or quietly balancing your traffic across a dozen servers. NGINX sits at the heart of a staggering amount of internet infrastructure, and yet most engineers interact with it only through config files without fully understanding what is happening underneath.
This blog is a deep dive into how NGINX actually works. Not just what it does, but why it was built the way it was, what engineering problems it solves, how it interacts with the Linux kernel, and what makes it so exceptionally fast even under enormous load. By the end, you should have the kind of intuition that lets you reason about NGINX the way a systems engineer would.

Why NGINX Exists at All
To understand NGINX, you have to understand the world it was born into. In the early 2000s, Apache HTTP Server was the dominant web server. Apache worked on a model where every incoming connection spawned either a new process or a new thread. For a few thousand requests, this was fine. But as web traffic started growing, engineers ran into a hard wall known as the C10K problem — how do you handle 10,000 simultaneous connections on a single server?
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