When you've configured your GoToSocial instance with local storage for media, you can use your [reverse proxy](../../getting_started/reverse_proxy/index.md) to serve these files directly and cache them. This avoids hitting GoToSocial for these requests and reverse proxies can typically serve assets faster than GoToSocial.
You can also use your reverse proxy to cache the GoToSocial web UI assets, like the CSS and images it uses.
When using a [split domain](../host-account-domain.md) deployment style, you need to ensure you configure caching of the assets and media on the host domain.
!!! warning "Media pruning"
If you've configured media pruning, you need to ensure that when media is not found on disk the request is still sent on to GoToSocial. This will ensure the media is fetched again from the remote instance and subsequent requests for this media will then be handled by your reverse proxy again.
## Endpoints
There are 2 endpoints that serve assets we can serve and cache:
*`/assets` which contains fonts, CSS, images etc. for the web UI
*`/fileserver` which serves attachments for status posts when using the local storage backend
The filesystem location of `/assets` is defined by the [`web-asset-base-dir`](../../configuration/web.md) configuration option. Files under `/fileserver` are retrieved from the [`storage-local-base-path`](../../configuration/storage.md).
The `/fileserver` location is a bit special. When we fail to fetch the media from disk, we want to proxy the request on to GoToSocial so it can try and fetch it. The `try_files` directive can't take a `proxy_pass` itself so instead we created the named `@fileserver` location that we pass in last to `try_files`.
!!! bug "Trailing slashes"
The trailing slashes in the `location` directives and the `alias` are significant, do not remove those.
The `expires` directive adds the necessary headers to inform the client how long it may cache the resource:
* For assets, which may change on each release, 5 minutes is used in this example
Nginx does not add cache headers to 4xx or 5xx response codes so a failure to fetch an asset won't get cached by clients. The `autoindex off` directive tells nginx to not serve a directory listing. This should be the default but it doesn't hurt to be explicit. The added `add_header` lines set additional options for the `Cache-Control` header:
*`public` is used to indicate that anyone may cache this resource
*`immutable` is used to indicate this resource will never change while it is fresh (it's before the end of the expires) allowing clients to forgo conditional requests to revalidate the resource during that timespan.