I’m currently researching the best method for running a static website from Docker.

The site consists of one single HTML file, a bunch of CSS files, and a few JS files. On server-side nothing needs to be preprocessed. The website uses JS to request some JSON files, though. Handling of the files is doing via client-side JS, the server only need to - serve the files.

The website is intended to be used as selfhosted web application and is quite niche so there won’t be much load and not many concurrent users.

I boiled it down to the following options:

  1. BusyBox in a selfmade Docker container, manually running httpd or The smallest Docker image …
  2. php:latest (ignoring the fact, that the built-in webserver is meant for development and not for production)
  3. Nginx serving the files (but this)

For all of the variants I found information online. From the options I found I actually prefer the BusyBox route because it seems the cleanest with the least amount of overhead (I just need to serve the files, the rest is done on the client).

Do you have any other ideas? How do you host static content?

  • smileyhead
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    1
    ·
    edit-2
    10 months ago

    Serving static app in Caddy:

    sudo apt install caddy
    sudo systemctl enable --now caddy

    Then in /etc/caddy/Caddyfile:

    example.com {
       root * /var/www/html
       file_server
    }
    

    That’s all, really.

    • sudneo@lemmy.world
      link
      fedilink
      English
      arrow-up
      1
      ·
      10 months ago

      If there is already another reverse proxy, doing this IMHO is worse than just running a container and adding one more rule in the proxy (if needed, with traefik it’s not for example). I also build all my servers with IaC and a repeatable setup, so installing stuff manually breaks the model (I want to be able to migrate server with minimal manual action, as I had to do it already twice…).

      The job is simple either way, I would say it mostly depends on which ecosystem someone is buying into and what secondary requirements one has.