I’ve been trying to get a wildcard certificate for my domain for use in Caddy…

i’ve got caddy installed and working fine but it seems i need to build caddy manually to include the cloudflaredns module?

My issue is that i installed caddy using apt… so i’m not really sure what i’m meant to do now…

Does anyone have any suggestions?

  • Perhyte@lemmy.world
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    0
    ·
    2 years ago

    That file is your new binary Caddy binary, assuming your server is an x64 Linux machine.

    Using that should follow mostly the same procedure as if you’ve built it yourself, following the doc @terribleplan@lemmy.nrd.li posted above, except you probably need to chmod +x that first, and maybe chown it too. (This is because your browser wisely does not mark files downloaded from the Internet as executable, and almost certainly does not run as root either)

    Disclaimer: I’ve always used docker images instead and have not tested this. But I think it should work, assuming those docs are correct for the self-built case.

    Move that file to your server (if necessary) and open a terminal in the directory where you’ve placed it. Then execute these commands:

    chmod +x caddy_linux_amd64_custom
    sudo chown root:root caddy_linux_amd64_custom
    sudo dpkg-divert --divert /usr/bin/caddy.default --rename /usr/bin/caddy
    sudo mv ./caddy_linux_amd64_custom /usr/bin/caddy.custom
    sudo update-alternatives --install /usr/bin/caddy caddy /usr/bin/caddy.default 10
    sudo update-alternatives --install /usr/bin/caddy caddy /usr/bin/caddy.custom 50
    

    If Caddy is already running you’ll probably want to restart it using sudo systemctl restart caddy.


    When a new version of Caddy comes out it won’t update the binary (because it has been diverted), so to update it manually you’ll need to redo a few of the steps:

    Download (and transfer if necessary) a new binary, then from a terminal:

    chmod +x caddy_linux_amd64_custom
    sudo chown root:root caddy_linux_amd64_custom
    sudo mv ./caddy_linux_amd64_custom /usr/bin/caddy.custom
    

    (Plus again sudo systemctl restart caddy if it’s already running)


    Typing all this out makes me so glad Watchtower exists for my Docker containers. I just made a Github Action to do a daily rebuild of Caddy with my modules, put that image name in my docker-compose.yaml, and Watchtower takes care of the rest.

    • D4NM3D@reddthat.comOP
      link
      fedilink
      English
      arrow-up
      0
      ·
      2 years ago

      Thank you for this… i need to take some time to read it more thoroughly… though your approach with Docker though will likely make a lot more sense for my environment.

      • Perhyte@lemmy.world
        link
        fedilink
        English
        arrow-up
        0
        ·
        2 years ago

        Docker is also a bit tricky, because to use a custom binary you need to build a custom image. But if you don’t mind manually installing updates it’s not too bad.

        • D4NM3D@reddthat.comOP
          link
          fedilink
          English
          arrow-up
          0
          ·
          2 years ago

          I had it running but it didn’t seem to be issuing wildcards… but afterwards i realised that whilst i had told it to use the cloudflare API… i don’t think at any stage i’d actually told it to issue wildcards… i guess i need to figure out how to do that…

          I’m questioning my need though really… i think the docs say it’s not recommended unless you’re dealing with thousands of subdomains…

          • Perhyte@lemmy.world
            link
            fedilink
            English
            arrow-up
            0
            ·
            2 years ago

            It will only issue wildcards if you have any sites named like *.yourdomain.com, i.e. it needs to see the *. to know to issue wildcards.

            The relevant parts of my Caddyfile look like this:

            {
            	# TLS settings.
            	acme_dns cloudflare {env.CLOUDFLARE_API_TOKEN}
            	email {env.ACME_EMAIL}
            }
            
            # Proxy a subdomain to a backend server.
            # Usage: `import proxy subdomain backendHost`
            (proxy) {
            	@sub-{args.0} host {args.0}.{$DOMAIN}
            	handle @sub-{args.0} {
            		reverse_proxy http://{args.1}
            	}
            }
            
            # Put everything in the same block to get a wildcard certificate.
            *.{$DOMAIN} {
            	# Handle particular subdomains.
            	import proxy changedetection changedetection:5000
            	import proxy uptime uptime-kuma:3001
            	import proxy whoami whoami
            
            	# Fallback message (unknown subdomain).
            	handle {
            		error "This subdomain is not currently in use." 404
            	}
            }
            

            The (alias) snippet at the top is used in the site block to tell it how to use a particular subdomain.

            (I’ve removed some Authelia stuff and handling the apex domain)

            {$DOMAIN} fills in my base domain from the environment, and {env.*} does the same for my credentials (but without putting it in the JSON config).