Caddy: Difference between revisions
imported>Onny Fix example syntax |
imported>Onny mNo edit summary |
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virtualHosts."example.org" = { | virtualHosts."example.org" = { | ||
extraConfig = '' | extraConfig = '' | ||
redir https://www.example.org | redir https://www.example.org{uri} | ||
''; | ''; | ||
serverAlias = [ "old.example.org" ]; | serverAlias = [ "old.example.org" ]; |
Revision as of 13:38, 24 August 2023
Caddy is an efficient, HTTP/2 capable web server that can serve static and dynamic web pages. It can also be a reverse proxy to serve multiple web services under one server. Its main features are its simple config setup and automatic HTTPS: It will automatically request and renew a LetsEncrypt certificate so that users of your service get a Browser-trusted and secure connection.
Get started
To try out Caddy add the following minimal example to your NixOS module:
{
# ...
services.caddy = {
enable = true;
virtualHosts."localhost".extraConfig = ''
respond "Hello, world!"
'';
};
}
This snippet will let Caddy respond on http://localhost
and https://localhost
with a dummy text "Hello world!". When no port is mentioned on virtualhost like just localhost
instead of localhost:8080
, Caddy listens on 80
and 443
by default and redirects requests from port 80 (unsecured) to 443 (secured).
Check http connection
You can use curl
to test the http connections:
$ curl localhost -i -L -k
HTTP/1.1 308 Permanent Redirect
Location: https://localhost/
..
HTTP/2 200
alt-svc: h3=":443"; ma=2592000
content-type: text/plain; charset=utf-8
...
Hello, world!
Here you can see that Caddy automatically redirects from an unsecure http://localhost to a secure https://localhost call.
For local addresses like "localhost" Caddy always generates and uses a self-signed certificate, which curl correctly doesn't trust; use the -k
flag to ignore that.
Check http(s) connection
When virtualhost and "real" host aren't the same it gets complicated with HTTPS, so the following curl command works:
$ curl --connect-to <virtualhost>:443:<realhost>:443 https://<virtualhost> -k
Hello, world!
Curl will set Host
header and TLS SNI</> in the request to
<virtualhost>
as desired by Caddy, but will make the actual request against the <realhost>
, e.g. a load-balancer or ingress-controller.
Alternatively with http and automatic redirects to https you can extend that call:
$ curl --connect-to <virtualhost>:80:<realhost>:80 --connect-to <virtualhost>:443:<realhost>:443 https://<virtualhost> -k -L
Hello, world!
Typical configurations
SSL
Caddy will automatically try to acquire SSL certificates for the specified domain, in this example example.org
. This requires you to configure the DNS records of your domain correctly, which should point to the address of your Caddy server. The firewall ports 80
and 443
needs to be opened.
services.caddy = {
enable = true;
virtualHosts."example.org".extraConfig = ''
encode gzip
file_server
root * ${
pkgs.runCommand "testdir" {} ''
mkdir "$out"
echo hello world > "$out/example.html"
''
}
'';
};
networking.firewall.allowedTCPPorts = [ 80 443];
Reverse proxy
The following snippet creates a reverse proxy for the domain example.org
, redirecting all requests to http://10.25.40.6
services.caddy = {
enable = true;
virtualHosts."example.org".extraConfig = ''
reverse_proxy http://10.25.40.6
'';
};
Redirect
Redirecting example.org
and old.example.org
to www.example.org
services.caddy = {
enable = true;
virtualHosts."example.org" = {
extraConfig = ''
redir https://www.example.org{uri}
'';
serverAlias = [ "old.example.org" ];
};
PHP FastCGI
Serving a PHP application in /var/www
on http://localhost .
services.caddy = {
enable = true;
virtualHosts."http://localhost" = {
extraConfig = ''
root * /var/www
file_server
php_fastcgi unix/var/run/phpfpm/localhost.sock
'';
};
};
You'll need a PHP-FPM socket listening on Unix socket path /var/run/phpfpm/localhost.sock
.
Debugging
Check used ports
To check if Caddy is running and listening as configured you can run netstat
:
$ netstat -tulpn
Active Internet connections (only servers)
Proto Recv-Q Send-Q Local Address Foreign Address State PID/Program name
tcp 0 0 127.0.0.1:2019 0.0.0.0:* LISTEN 1202/caddy
tcp6 0 0 :::80 :::* LISTEN 1202/caddy
tcp6 0 0 :::443 :::* LISTEN 1202/caddy
udp6 0 0 :::443 :::* 1202/caddy
The tcp (ipv4) socket port 2019 is Caddy's management endpoint, for when you want manage its config via web REST calls instead of Nix (ignore).
The tcp6 (an ipv6 socket that also listens on ipv4) socket on port 80 (HTTP) and 443 (HTTPS) indicate that our virtualhost config was used.
Virtualhost and real host not identical
When you connect to Caddy must ensure that the "Host" header matches the virtualhost entry of Caddy. For example, when testing locally a config like
services.caddy = {
enable = true;
virtualHosts."example.org".extraConfig = ''
respond "Hello, world!"
'';
};
you must send the request against "localhost" and manually override the host header to "example.org":
$ curl localhost -i -H "Host: example.org"
HTTP/1.1 308 Permanent Redirect
Connection: close
Location: https://example.org/
Server: Caddy
...
Above you also see the redirect from http://localhost to https://example.org; Caddy always redirects from the unsecure to the secure port of your virtualhost.
If the response is empty, try setting a port number like 80 and/or try a local TLS security certificate instead of global LetsEncrypt:
services.caddy = {
enable = true;
virtualHosts."example.org:80".extraConfig = ''
respond "Hello, world!"
tls internal
'';
};
With "tls internal" Caddy will generate a local certificate, which is good when testing locally and/or you don't have internet access (e.g. inside a nixos-container).
See also