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Serve round corners with custom tinting. Vroom, vroom! π
evanmiller/nginx_circle_gif
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Notes on the circle_gif module --- To install, compile nginx with this ./configure option: --add-module=path/to/this/directory To build the module dynamically, use this ./configure option: --add-dynamic-module=path/to/this/directory You must have the ImageMagick development headers for it to work. The circle_gif module generates simple circle images with the colors and size specified in the URL. The images are served quickly, much faster than if they had been read from disk. The module was made to help web designers change the colors of their "round corners" without having to fire up PhotoShop. To enable the circles, add a "circle_gif;" directive to the location where you want them. My nginx.conf has this: location /circles { circle_gif; } After that, the circles will be accessible like this: /circles/<background color>/<foreground color>/<size>.gif Background and foreground color are 24-bit hex colors, e.g. "ffffff" is white and "000000" is black. Size is the radius of the circle in pixels. This generates a black on white circle of radius 20: /circles/ffffff/000000/20.gif By default, only even-numbered radii between 10 and 20 are allowed. To change this, you can use the directives "circle_min_radius" (default 10), "circle_max_radius" (default 20), and "circle_step_radius" (default 2). Note that an image for each radius is created at server startup and kept in memory, so adding more circle sizes will slow server startup and use (a very small amount of) RAM. --Evan Miller [email protected]
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Serve round corners with custom tinting. Vroom, vroom! π