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  3. How do I use HTTPS on a private LAN without self-signed certs?

How do I use HTTPS on a private LAN without self-signed certs?

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  • ? Guest

    Maybe this is more of a home lab question, but I'm utterly clueless regarding PKI and HTTPS certs, despite taking more than one class that goes into some detail about how the system works. I've tried finding guides on how to set up your own CA, but my eyes glaze over after the third or fourth certificate you have to generate.

    Anyway, I know you need a public DNS record for HTTPS to work, and it struck me recently that I do in fact own a domain name that I currently use as my DNS suffix on my LAN. Is there a way I can get Let's Encrypt to dole out a wildcard certificate I can use on the hosts in my LAN so I don't have to fiddle with every machine that uses every service I'm hosting? If so, is there a guide for the brain dead one could point me to? Maybe doing this will help me grock the whole PKI thing.

    mhzawadi@lemmy.horwood.cloudM This user is from outside of this forum
    mhzawadi@lemmy.horwood.cloudM This user is from outside of this forum
    [email protected]
    wrote on last edited by
    #8

    If you have your own domain and your DNS provider has an API, you can get a certificate for anything in your domain

    1 Reply Last reply
    0
    • ptz@dubvee.orgP [email protected]

      Is there a way I can get Let's Encrypt to dole out a wildcard certificate

      Yep. Just specify the domains yourdomain.com and *.yourdomain.com in the certbot request. Wildcard domains require the DNS-based challenge, but you've said you're already good there.

      I used to run an internal CA, and it wasn't too hard to setup a CA and distribute my root cert. Except on mobile devices. On Android it was easy, but there was a persistent warning that my network traffic could be intercepted (which is true when there's a custom root cert installed), but it since it was my cert, it got annoying seeing that all the time. Not sure if Apple devices can even do that, but regardless, it wasn't practical for friends who wanted to use my self-hosted services to install a custom cert when they were over.

      ? Offline
      ? Offline
      Guest
      wrote on last edited by
      #9

      Cool. Follow up question: Do I generate the cert once and distribute the same private key to all the servers I'm running? I'm guessing not, but does that mean I run the certbot command on every server?

      ptz@dubvee.orgP 1 Reply Last reply
      0
      • ? Guest

        Maybe this is more of a home lab question, but I'm utterly clueless regarding PKI and HTTPS certs, despite taking more than one class that goes into some detail about how the system works. I've tried finding guides on how to set up your own CA, but my eyes glaze over after the third or fourth certificate you have to generate.

        Anyway, I know you need a public DNS record for HTTPS to work, and it struck me recently that I do in fact own a domain name that I currently use as my DNS suffix on my LAN. Is there a way I can get Let's Encrypt to dole out a wildcard certificate I can use on the hosts in my LAN so I don't have to fiddle with every machine that uses every service I'm hosting? If so, is there a guide for the brain dead one could point me to? Maybe doing this will help me grock the whole PKI thing.

        T This user is from outside of this forum
        T This user is from outside of this forum
        [email protected]
        wrote on last edited by
        #10

        You need to control a domain, so LE can verify you are the controller of the domain, then LE will issue you a certificate saying you are the controller of the domain.

        For a wildcard LE cert, you need to use the DNS challenge method.
        Essentially the ACME client (or certbot or whatever) will talk to LE and say "I want a DNS challenge for *.example.com".
        LE will reply "ok, your order number 69, and your challenge code is DEADBEEF".
        ACME then interacts with your public nameserver (or you have to do this manually) and add the challenge code as a txt record _acme-challenge.example.com. (I've been caught out by the fact LE uses Google DNS for resolution, and Google will only follow 1 level of NS records from the root authorative nameserver).
        All the while, LE is checking for that record. When it finds the record, it mints a wildcard certificate.
        ACME then periodically checks in with LE asking for order 69. Once LE has minted the cert, it will return it to acme.
        And now you have a wildcard cert.

        So, how to use it on a local domain?
        Use a split horizon DNS method.
        Ensure your DHCP is handing out a local DNS for resolving.
        Configure that local DNS to then use 8.8.8.8 or whatever as it's upstream.
        Then load in static/override records to the local DNS.
        Pihole can do this. OPNSense/pfSense can do this. Unifi can do some of this.

        How does this work?
        Any device on your network that wants to know the IP of example.example.com will ask it's configured DNS - the local DNS that you have configured.
        The local DNS will check it's static assignments and go "yeh, example.example.com is 10.10.3.3".
        If you ask you local DNS for google.com, it won't have a static assignment for it, so it will ask it's upstream DNS, and return that result.
        And it means you aren't putting private IP spaces on public NS records.

        Then you can load in your wildcard cert to 10.10.3.3, and you will have a trusted HTTPS connection.

        Here is a list of LE clients that will automate LE certs.
        https://letsencrypt.org/docs/client-options/

        Have a read through and pick your desired flavour.
        Dig into the docs of that flavour, and start playing around.

        If it's all HTTPS, consider using something like Nginx Proxy Manager (https://nginxproxymanager.com/) as a reverse proxy in front of your services and for managing the LE cert.
        It's super easy to use, has a decent GUI, and then it's only 1 IP to point all DNS records to.

        1 Reply Last reply
        0
        • ? Guest

          Maybe this is more of a home lab question, but I'm utterly clueless regarding PKI and HTTPS certs, despite taking more than one class that goes into some detail about how the system works. I've tried finding guides on how to set up your own CA, but my eyes glaze over after the third or fourth certificate you have to generate.

          Anyway, I know you need a public DNS record for HTTPS to work, and it struck me recently that I do in fact own a domain name that I currently use as my DNS suffix on my LAN. Is there a way I can get Let's Encrypt to dole out a wildcard certificate I can use on the hosts in my LAN so I don't have to fiddle with every machine that uses every service I'm hosting? If so, is there a guide for the brain dead one could point me to? Maybe doing this will help me grock the whole PKI thing.

          T This user is from outside of this forum
          T This user is from outside of this forum
          [email protected]
          wrote on last edited by
          #11

          If you own a domain, which you do, you can get wildcard certs from Let's Encrypt using a DNS challenge. Most (all?) popular reverse proxies can do this either natively or via an addon/module, you just need to use a supported DNS provider.

          1 Reply Last reply
          0
          • ? Guest

            Cool. Follow up question: Do I generate the cert once and distribute the same private key to all the servers I'm running? I'm guessing not, but does that mean I run the certbot command on every server?

            ptz@dubvee.orgP This user is from outside of this forum
            ptz@dubvee.orgP This user is from outside of this forum
            [email protected]
            wrote on last edited by
            #12

            I have a single Nginx setup which is the frontend for all my web services. So I only need to deploy it there (and to its HA partner). My renewal script just scp's it to the secondary and does an nginx -s reload on both.

            I do generate separate certs/keys for my non-web servers, but there's only two of those.

            You could also, if you wanted, just generate one cert and distribute it and its key to everything with a script or other automation tool (Ansible is what I used to use).

            1 Reply Last reply
            0
            • ? Guest

              Maybe this is more of a home lab question, but I'm utterly clueless regarding PKI and HTTPS certs, despite taking more than one class that goes into some detail about how the system works. I've tried finding guides on how to set up your own CA, but my eyes glaze over after the third or fourth certificate you have to generate.

              Anyway, I know you need a public DNS record for HTTPS to work, and it struck me recently that I do in fact own a domain name that I currently use as my DNS suffix on my LAN. Is there a way I can get Let's Encrypt to dole out a wildcard certificate I can use on the hosts in my LAN so I don't have to fiddle with every machine that uses every service I'm hosting? If so, is there a guide for the brain dead one could point me to? Maybe doing this will help me grock the whole PKI thing.

              mouse@midwest.socialM This user is from outside of this forum
              mouse@midwest.socialM This user is from outside of this forum
              [email protected]
              wrote on last edited by
              #13

              I use Caddy for this. I'll leave links to the documentation as well as a few examples.

              Here's the documentation for wildcard certs.
              https://caddyserver.com/docs/automatic-https#wildcard-certificates

              Here's how you add DNS providers to Caddy without Docker.
              https://caddy.community/t/how-to-use-dns-provider-modules-in-caddy-2/8148

              Here's how you do it with Docker.
              https://github.com/docker-library/docs/tree/master/caddy#adding-custom-caddy-modules

              Look for the DNS provider in this repository first.
              https://github.com/caddy-dns

              Here's documentation about using environment variables.
              https://caddyserver.com/docs/caddyfile/concepts#environment-variables

              Docker

              A few examples of Dockerfiles. These will build Caddy with DNS support.

              DuckDNS

              FROM caddy:2-builder AS builder
              RUN xcaddy build --with github.com/caddy-dns/duckdns
              
              FROM caddy:2
              COPY --from=builder /usr/bin/caddy /usr/bin/caddy
              

              Cloudflare

              FROM caddy:2-builder AS builder
              RUN xcaddy build --with github.com/caddy-dns/cloudflare
              
              FROM caddy:2
              COPY --from=builder /usr/bin/caddy /usr/bin/caddy
              

              Porkbun

              FROM caddy:2-builder AS builder
              RUN xcaddy build --with github.com/caddy-dns/porkbun
              
              FROM caddy:2
              COPY --from=builder /usr/bin/caddy /usr/bin/caddy
              

              Configure DNS provider

              This is what to add the the Caddyfile, I've used these in the examples that follow this section.
              You can look at the repository for the DNS provider to see how to configure it for example.

              DuckDNS

              https://github.com/caddy-dns/cloudflare?tab=readme-ov-file#caddyfile-examples

              tls {
              	dns duckdns {env.DUCKDNS_API_TOKEN}
              }
              

              CloudFlare

              https://github.com/caddy-dns/cloudflare?tab=readme-ov-file#caddyfile-examples
              Dual-key

              tls {
              	dns cloudflare {
              		zone_token {env.CF_ZONE_TOKEN}
              		api_token {env.CF_API_TOKEN}
              	}
              }
              

              Single-key

              tls {
              	dns cloudflare {env.CF_API_TOKEN}
              }
              

              PorkBun

              https://github.com/caddy-dns/porkbun?tab=readme-ov-file#config-examples
              Global

              {
              	acme_dns porkbun {
              			api_key {env.PORKBUN_API_KEY}
              			api_secret_key {env.PORKBUN_API_SECRET_KEY}
              	}
              }
              

              or per site

              tls {
              	dns porkbun {
              			api_key {env.PORKBUN_API_KEY}
              			api_secret_key {env.PORKBUN_API_SECRET_KEY}
              	}
              }
              

              Caddyfile

              And finally the Caddyfile examples.

              DuckDNS

              Here's how you do it with DuckDNS.

              *.example.org {
                      tls {
                              dns duckdns {$DUCKDNS_TOKEN}
                      }
              
                      @hass host home-assistant.example.org
                      handle @hass {
                              reverse_proxy home-assistant:8123
                      }
              }
              

              Also you can use environment variables like this.

              *.{$DOMAIN} {
                      tls {
                              dns duckdns {$DUCKDNS_TOKEN}
                      }
              
                      @hass host home-assistant.{$DOMAIN}
                      handle @hass {
                              reverse_proxy home-assistant:8123
                      }
              }
              

              CloudFlare.

              *.{$DOMAIN} {
                      tls {
              	        dns cloudflare {env.CF_API_TOKEN}
                      }
              
                      @hass host home-assistant.{$DOMAIN}
                      handle @hass {
                              reverse_proxy home-assistant:8123
                      }
              }
              

              Porkbun

              *.{$DOMAIN} {
                      tls {
              	        dns porkbun {
              			api_key {env.PORKBUN_API_KEY}
              			api_secret_key {env.PORKBUN_API_SECRET_KEY}
              	        }
                      }
              
                      @hass host home-assistant.{$DOMAIN}
                      handle @hass {
                              reverse_proxy home-assistant:8123
                      }
              }
              
              E T C M S 5 Replies Last reply
              0
              • ? Guest

                Maybe this is more of a home lab question, but I'm utterly clueless regarding PKI and HTTPS certs, despite taking more than one class that goes into some detail about how the system works. I've tried finding guides on how to set up your own CA, but my eyes glaze over after the third or fourth certificate you have to generate.

                Anyway, I know you need a public DNS record for HTTPS to work, and it struck me recently that I do in fact own a domain name that I currently use as my DNS suffix on my LAN. Is there a way I can get Let's Encrypt to dole out a wildcard certificate I can use on the hosts in my LAN so I don't have to fiddle with every machine that uses every service I'm hosting? If so, is there a guide for the brain dead one could point me to? Maybe doing this will help me grock the whole PKI thing.

                lemmchen@feddit.orgL This user is from outside of this forum
                lemmchen@feddit.orgL This user is from outside of this forum
                [email protected]
                wrote on last edited by
                #14

                Some form of domain and a DNS server (router or Pi-Hole) in your LAN

                1 Reply Last reply
                0
                • ? Guest

                  Maybe this is more of a home lab question, but I'm utterly clueless regarding PKI and HTTPS certs, despite taking more than one class that goes into some detail about how the system works. I've tried finding guides on how to set up your own CA, but my eyes glaze over after the third or fourth certificate you have to generate.

                  Anyway, I know you need a public DNS record for HTTPS to work, and it struck me recently that I do in fact own a domain name that I currently use as my DNS suffix on my LAN. Is there a way I can get Let's Encrypt to dole out a wildcard certificate I can use on the hosts in my LAN so I don't have to fiddle with every machine that uses every service I'm hosting? If so, is there a guide for the brain dead one could point me to? Maybe doing this will help me grock the whole PKI thing.

                  S This user is from outside of this forum
                  S This user is from outside of this forum
                  [email protected]
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #15

                  Reverse proxy + DNS-challenge wildcard cert for your domain. The end. Super easy to set up and zero maintenance. Adding a new service is just a couple clicks in your reverse proxy and you’re done.

                  1 Reply Last reply
                  0
                  • ? Guest

                    Maybe this is more of a home lab question, but I'm utterly clueless regarding PKI and HTTPS certs, despite taking more than one class that goes into some detail about how the system works. I've tried finding guides on how to set up your own CA, but my eyes glaze over after the third or fourth certificate you have to generate.

                    Anyway, I know you need a public DNS record for HTTPS to work, and it struck me recently that I do in fact own a domain name that I currently use as my DNS suffix on my LAN. Is there a way I can get Let's Encrypt to dole out a wildcard certificate I can use on the hosts in my LAN so I don't have to fiddle with every machine that uses every service I'm hosting? If so, is there a guide for the brain dead one could point me to? Maybe doing this will help me grock the whole PKI thing.

                    zebragoose@sh.itjust.worksZ This user is from outside of this forum
                    zebragoose@sh.itjust.worksZ This user is from outside of this forum
                    [email protected]
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #16

                    I did follow this guide from Techno Tim, he uses cloudflare but you can go with Lets encrypt aswell

                    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=liV3c9m_OX8

                    1 Reply Last reply
                    0
                    • mouse@midwest.socialM [email protected]

                      I use Caddy for this. I'll leave links to the documentation as well as a few examples.

                      Here's the documentation for wildcard certs.
                      https://caddyserver.com/docs/automatic-https#wildcard-certificates

                      Here's how you add DNS providers to Caddy without Docker.
                      https://caddy.community/t/how-to-use-dns-provider-modules-in-caddy-2/8148

                      Here's how you do it with Docker.
                      https://github.com/docker-library/docs/tree/master/caddy#adding-custom-caddy-modules

                      Look for the DNS provider in this repository first.
                      https://github.com/caddy-dns

                      Here's documentation about using environment variables.
                      https://caddyserver.com/docs/caddyfile/concepts#environment-variables

                      Docker

                      A few examples of Dockerfiles. These will build Caddy with DNS support.

                      DuckDNS

                      FROM caddy:2-builder AS builder
                      RUN xcaddy build --with github.com/caddy-dns/duckdns
                      
                      FROM caddy:2
                      COPY --from=builder /usr/bin/caddy /usr/bin/caddy
                      

                      Cloudflare

                      FROM caddy:2-builder AS builder
                      RUN xcaddy build --with github.com/caddy-dns/cloudflare
                      
                      FROM caddy:2
                      COPY --from=builder /usr/bin/caddy /usr/bin/caddy
                      

                      Porkbun

                      FROM caddy:2-builder AS builder
                      RUN xcaddy build --with github.com/caddy-dns/porkbun
                      
                      FROM caddy:2
                      COPY --from=builder /usr/bin/caddy /usr/bin/caddy
                      

                      Configure DNS provider

                      This is what to add the the Caddyfile, I've used these in the examples that follow this section.
                      You can look at the repository for the DNS provider to see how to configure it for example.

                      DuckDNS

                      https://github.com/caddy-dns/cloudflare?tab=readme-ov-file#caddyfile-examples

                      tls {
                      	dns duckdns {env.DUCKDNS_API_TOKEN}
                      }
                      

                      CloudFlare

                      https://github.com/caddy-dns/cloudflare?tab=readme-ov-file#caddyfile-examples
                      Dual-key

                      tls {
                      	dns cloudflare {
                      		zone_token {env.CF_ZONE_TOKEN}
                      		api_token {env.CF_API_TOKEN}
                      	}
                      }
                      

                      Single-key

                      tls {
                      	dns cloudflare {env.CF_API_TOKEN}
                      }
                      

                      PorkBun

                      https://github.com/caddy-dns/porkbun?tab=readme-ov-file#config-examples
                      Global

                      {
                      	acme_dns porkbun {
                      			api_key {env.PORKBUN_API_KEY}
                      			api_secret_key {env.PORKBUN_API_SECRET_KEY}
                      	}
                      }
                      

                      or per site

                      tls {
                      	dns porkbun {
                      			api_key {env.PORKBUN_API_KEY}
                      			api_secret_key {env.PORKBUN_API_SECRET_KEY}
                      	}
                      }
                      

                      Caddyfile

                      And finally the Caddyfile examples.

                      DuckDNS

                      Here's how you do it with DuckDNS.

                      *.example.org {
                              tls {
                                      dns duckdns {$DUCKDNS_TOKEN}
                              }
                      
                              @hass host home-assistant.example.org
                              handle @hass {
                                      reverse_proxy home-assistant:8123
                              }
                      }
                      

                      Also you can use environment variables like this.

                      *.{$DOMAIN} {
                              tls {
                                      dns duckdns {$DUCKDNS_TOKEN}
                              }
                      
                              @hass host home-assistant.{$DOMAIN}
                              handle @hass {
                                      reverse_proxy home-assistant:8123
                              }
                      }
                      

                      CloudFlare.

                      *.{$DOMAIN} {
                              tls {
                      	        dns cloudflare {env.CF_API_TOKEN}
                              }
                      
                              @hass host home-assistant.{$DOMAIN}
                              handle @hass {
                                      reverse_proxy home-assistant:8123
                              }
                      }
                      

                      Porkbun

                      *.{$DOMAIN} {
                              tls {
                      	        dns porkbun {
                      			api_key {env.PORKBUN_API_KEY}
                      			api_secret_key {env.PORKBUN_API_SECRET_KEY}
                      	        }
                              }
                      
                              @hass host home-assistant.{$DOMAIN}
                              handle @hass {
                                      reverse_proxy home-assistant:8123
                              }
                      }
                      
                      E This user is from outside of this forum
                      E This user is from outside of this forum
                      [email protected]
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #17

                      thank you for providing such a thorough reply, good shit

                      1 Reply Last reply
                      0
                      • mouse@midwest.socialM [email protected]

                        I use Caddy for this. I'll leave links to the documentation as well as a few examples.

                        Here's the documentation for wildcard certs.
                        https://caddyserver.com/docs/automatic-https#wildcard-certificates

                        Here's how you add DNS providers to Caddy without Docker.
                        https://caddy.community/t/how-to-use-dns-provider-modules-in-caddy-2/8148

                        Here's how you do it with Docker.
                        https://github.com/docker-library/docs/tree/master/caddy#adding-custom-caddy-modules

                        Look for the DNS provider in this repository first.
                        https://github.com/caddy-dns

                        Here's documentation about using environment variables.
                        https://caddyserver.com/docs/caddyfile/concepts#environment-variables

                        Docker

                        A few examples of Dockerfiles. These will build Caddy with DNS support.

                        DuckDNS

                        FROM caddy:2-builder AS builder
                        RUN xcaddy build --with github.com/caddy-dns/duckdns
                        
                        FROM caddy:2
                        COPY --from=builder /usr/bin/caddy /usr/bin/caddy
                        

                        Cloudflare

                        FROM caddy:2-builder AS builder
                        RUN xcaddy build --with github.com/caddy-dns/cloudflare
                        
                        FROM caddy:2
                        COPY --from=builder /usr/bin/caddy /usr/bin/caddy
                        

                        Porkbun

                        FROM caddy:2-builder AS builder
                        RUN xcaddy build --with github.com/caddy-dns/porkbun
                        
                        FROM caddy:2
                        COPY --from=builder /usr/bin/caddy /usr/bin/caddy
                        

                        Configure DNS provider

                        This is what to add the the Caddyfile, I've used these in the examples that follow this section.
                        You can look at the repository for the DNS provider to see how to configure it for example.

                        DuckDNS

                        https://github.com/caddy-dns/cloudflare?tab=readme-ov-file#caddyfile-examples

                        tls {
                        	dns duckdns {env.DUCKDNS_API_TOKEN}
                        }
                        

                        CloudFlare

                        https://github.com/caddy-dns/cloudflare?tab=readme-ov-file#caddyfile-examples
                        Dual-key

                        tls {
                        	dns cloudflare {
                        		zone_token {env.CF_ZONE_TOKEN}
                        		api_token {env.CF_API_TOKEN}
                        	}
                        }
                        

                        Single-key

                        tls {
                        	dns cloudflare {env.CF_API_TOKEN}
                        }
                        

                        PorkBun

                        https://github.com/caddy-dns/porkbun?tab=readme-ov-file#config-examples
                        Global

                        {
                        	acme_dns porkbun {
                        			api_key {env.PORKBUN_API_KEY}
                        			api_secret_key {env.PORKBUN_API_SECRET_KEY}
                        	}
                        }
                        

                        or per site

                        tls {
                        	dns porkbun {
                        			api_key {env.PORKBUN_API_KEY}
                        			api_secret_key {env.PORKBUN_API_SECRET_KEY}
                        	}
                        }
                        

                        Caddyfile

                        And finally the Caddyfile examples.

                        DuckDNS

                        Here's how you do it with DuckDNS.

                        *.example.org {
                                tls {
                                        dns duckdns {$DUCKDNS_TOKEN}
                                }
                        
                                @hass host home-assistant.example.org
                                handle @hass {
                                        reverse_proxy home-assistant:8123
                                }
                        }
                        

                        Also you can use environment variables like this.

                        *.{$DOMAIN} {
                                tls {
                                        dns duckdns {$DUCKDNS_TOKEN}
                                }
                        
                                @hass host home-assistant.{$DOMAIN}
                                handle @hass {
                                        reverse_proxy home-assistant:8123
                                }
                        }
                        

                        CloudFlare.

                        *.{$DOMAIN} {
                                tls {
                        	        dns cloudflare {env.CF_API_TOKEN}
                                }
                        
                                @hass host home-assistant.{$DOMAIN}
                                handle @hass {
                                        reverse_proxy home-assistant:8123
                                }
                        }
                        

                        Porkbun

                        *.{$DOMAIN} {
                                tls {
                        	        dns porkbun {
                        			api_key {env.PORKBUN_API_KEY}
                        			api_secret_key {env.PORKBUN_API_SECRET_KEY}
                        	        }
                                }
                        
                                @hass host home-assistant.{$DOMAIN}
                                handle @hass {
                                        reverse_proxy home-assistant:8123
                                }
                        }
                        
                        T This user is from outside of this forum
                        T This user is from outside of this forum
                        [email protected]
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #18

                        Thanks for being so detailed!

                        I use caddy for straightforward https, but every time I try to use it for a service that isn't just a reverse_proxy entry, I really struggle to find resources I understand... and most of the time the "solutions" I find are outdated and don't seem to work. The most recent example of this for me would be Baikal.

                        Do you have any recommendations for where I might get good examples and learn more about how do troubleshoot and improve my Caddyfile entries?

                        Thanks!

                        mouse@midwest.socialM S 2 Replies Last reply
                        0
                        • mouse@midwest.socialM [email protected]

                          I use Caddy for this. I'll leave links to the documentation as well as a few examples.

                          Here's the documentation for wildcard certs.
                          https://caddyserver.com/docs/automatic-https#wildcard-certificates

                          Here's how you add DNS providers to Caddy without Docker.
                          https://caddy.community/t/how-to-use-dns-provider-modules-in-caddy-2/8148

                          Here's how you do it with Docker.
                          https://github.com/docker-library/docs/tree/master/caddy#adding-custom-caddy-modules

                          Look for the DNS provider in this repository first.
                          https://github.com/caddy-dns

                          Here's documentation about using environment variables.
                          https://caddyserver.com/docs/caddyfile/concepts#environment-variables

                          Docker

                          A few examples of Dockerfiles. These will build Caddy with DNS support.

                          DuckDNS

                          FROM caddy:2-builder AS builder
                          RUN xcaddy build --with github.com/caddy-dns/duckdns
                          
                          FROM caddy:2
                          COPY --from=builder /usr/bin/caddy /usr/bin/caddy
                          

                          Cloudflare

                          FROM caddy:2-builder AS builder
                          RUN xcaddy build --with github.com/caddy-dns/cloudflare
                          
                          FROM caddy:2
                          COPY --from=builder /usr/bin/caddy /usr/bin/caddy
                          

                          Porkbun

                          FROM caddy:2-builder AS builder
                          RUN xcaddy build --with github.com/caddy-dns/porkbun
                          
                          FROM caddy:2
                          COPY --from=builder /usr/bin/caddy /usr/bin/caddy
                          

                          Configure DNS provider

                          This is what to add the the Caddyfile, I've used these in the examples that follow this section.
                          You can look at the repository for the DNS provider to see how to configure it for example.

                          DuckDNS

                          https://github.com/caddy-dns/cloudflare?tab=readme-ov-file#caddyfile-examples

                          tls {
                          	dns duckdns {env.DUCKDNS_API_TOKEN}
                          }
                          

                          CloudFlare

                          https://github.com/caddy-dns/cloudflare?tab=readme-ov-file#caddyfile-examples
                          Dual-key

                          tls {
                          	dns cloudflare {
                          		zone_token {env.CF_ZONE_TOKEN}
                          		api_token {env.CF_API_TOKEN}
                          	}
                          }
                          

                          Single-key

                          tls {
                          	dns cloudflare {env.CF_API_TOKEN}
                          }
                          

                          PorkBun

                          https://github.com/caddy-dns/porkbun?tab=readme-ov-file#config-examples
                          Global

                          {
                          	acme_dns porkbun {
                          			api_key {env.PORKBUN_API_KEY}
                          			api_secret_key {env.PORKBUN_API_SECRET_KEY}
                          	}
                          }
                          

                          or per site

                          tls {
                          	dns porkbun {
                          			api_key {env.PORKBUN_API_KEY}
                          			api_secret_key {env.PORKBUN_API_SECRET_KEY}
                          	}
                          }
                          

                          Caddyfile

                          And finally the Caddyfile examples.

                          DuckDNS

                          Here's how you do it with DuckDNS.

                          *.example.org {
                                  tls {
                                          dns duckdns {$DUCKDNS_TOKEN}
                                  }
                          
                                  @hass host home-assistant.example.org
                                  handle @hass {
                                          reverse_proxy home-assistant:8123
                                  }
                          }
                          

                          Also you can use environment variables like this.

                          *.{$DOMAIN} {
                                  tls {
                                          dns duckdns {$DUCKDNS_TOKEN}
                                  }
                          
                                  @hass host home-assistant.{$DOMAIN}
                                  handle @hass {
                                          reverse_proxy home-assistant:8123
                                  }
                          }
                          

                          CloudFlare.

                          *.{$DOMAIN} {
                                  tls {
                          	        dns cloudflare {env.CF_API_TOKEN}
                                  }
                          
                                  @hass host home-assistant.{$DOMAIN}
                                  handle @hass {
                                          reverse_proxy home-assistant:8123
                                  }
                          }
                          

                          Porkbun

                          *.{$DOMAIN} {
                                  tls {
                          	        dns porkbun {
                          			api_key {env.PORKBUN_API_KEY}
                          			api_secret_key {env.PORKBUN_API_SECRET_KEY}
                          	        }
                                  }
                          
                                  @hass host home-assistant.{$DOMAIN}
                                  handle @hass {
                                          reverse_proxy home-assistant:8123
                                  }
                          }
                          
                          C This user is from outside of this forum
                          C This user is from outside of this forum
                          [email protected]
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #19

                          I do the same!

                          I have a provider that is not supported by caddy, but I can still use it via duckdns delegation!

                          https://github.com/caddy-dns/duckdns?tab=readme-ov-file#challenge-delegation

                          Challenge delegation

                          To obtain a certificate using ACME DNS challenges, you'd use this module as described above. But, if you have a different domain (say, my.example.com) CNAME'd to your Duck DNS domain, you have two options:

                          1. Not use this module: Use a module matching the DNS provider for my.example.com.
                          2. Delegate the challenge to Duck DNS.
                          1 Reply Last reply
                          0
                          • ? Guest

                            Maybe this is more of a home lab question, but I'm utterly clueless regarding PKI and HTTPS certs, despite taking more than one class that goes into some detail about how the system works. I've tried finding guides on how to set up your own CA, but my eyes glaze over after the third or fourth certificate you have to generate.

                            Anyway, I know you need a public DNS record for HTTPS to work, and it struck me recently that I do in fact own a domain name that I currently use as my DNS suffix on my LAN. Is there a way I can get Let's Encrypt to dole out a wildcard certificate I can use on the hosts in my LAN so I don't have to fiddle with every machine that uses every service I'm hosting? If so, is there a guide for the brain dead one could point me to? Maybe doing this will help me grock the whole PKI thing.

                            ? Offline
                            ? Offline
                            Guest
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #20

                            +1 for the letsencrypt wildcard with DNS verification, been using this for years. with dehydrated (https://github.com/dehydrated-io/dehydrated) you can automate renewing the certs, pretty convenient.

                            One thing i didn't see mentioned yet - you can also easily create a wildcard for a subdomain of your domain, e.g. *.local.example.com.
                            Most DNS providers let you define something like _acme-challenge.local IN TXT ... so you don't even need to define an extra zone for local.example.com.
                            Probably makes no big difference, but i like it ^^

                            4 1 Reply Last reply
                            0
                            • ? Guest

                              Maybe this is more of a home lab question, but I'm utterly clueless regarding PKI and HTTPS certs, despite taking more than one class that goes into some detail about how the system works. I've tried finding guides on how to set up your own CA, but my eyes glaze over after the third or fourth certificate you have to generate.

                              Anyway, I know you need a public DNS record for HTTPS to work, and it struck me recently that I do in fact own a domain name that I currently use as my DNS suffix on my LAN. Is there a way I can get Let's Encrypt to dole out a wildcard certificate I can use on the hosts in my LAN so I don't have to fiddle with every machine that uses every service I'm hosting? If so, is there a guide for the brain dead one could point me to? Maybe doing this will help me grock the whole PKI thing.

                              I This user is from outside of this forum
                              I This user is from outside of this forum
                              [email protected]
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #21

                              I'll mention this as no one has yet but you can be your own CA. Tools like mkcert make it easy

                              https://github.com/FiloSottile/mkcert

                              This is potentially more hassle (than using public DNS) as you have to get your CA certs onto every device. However it may be suitable depending on the situation.

                              F 1 Reply Last reply
                              0
                              • ? Guest

                                +1 for the letsencrypt wildcard with DNS verification, been using this for years. with dehydrated (https://github.com/dehydrated-io/dehydrated) you can automate renewing the certs, pretty convenient.

                                One thing i didn't see mentioned yet - you can also easily create a wildcard for a subdomain of your domain, e.g. *.local.example.com.
                                Most DNS providers let you define something like _acme-challenge.local IN TXT ... so you don't even need to define an extra zone for local.example.com.
                                Probably makes no big difference, but i like it ^^

                                4 This user is from outside of this forum
                                4 This user is from outside of this forum
                                [email protected]
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #22

                                If you are really looking for hassle-free this is it. LetsEncrypt root certificates are already trusted by most devices so when your friends come over and wanna control the media library or whatever you don’t need to install your locally hosted CA’s self-signed certificates on their phone.

                                Also certbot and a cron or systemd timer is all you need; people have rolled all these fancy solutions but I say keep it simple.

                                S 1 Reply Last reply
                                0
                                • ? Guest

                                  Maybe this is more of a home lab question, but I'm utterly clueless regarding PKI and HTTPS certs, despite taking more than one class that goes into some detail about how the system works. I've tried finding guides on how to set up your own CA, but my eyes glaze over after the third or fourth certificate you have to generate.

                                  Anyway, I know you need a public DNS record for HTTPS to work, and it struck me recently that I do in fact own a domain name that I currently use as my DNS suffix on my LAN. Is there a way I can get Let's Encrypt to dole out a wildcard certificate I can use on the hosts in my LAN so I don't have to fiddle with every machine that uses every service I'm hosting? If so, is there a guide for the brain dead one could point me to? Maybe doing this will help me grock the whole PKI thing.

                                  J This user is from outside of this forum
                                  J This user is from outside of this forum
                                  [email protected]
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #23

                                  The most straightforward thing to do, on a private LAN, is to make all your own certs, from a custom root cert, and then manually install that cert as "trusted" on each machine. If none of the machines on this network need to accessed from outside the LAN, then you're golden.

                                  1 Reply Last reply
                                  1
                                  • T [email protected]

                                    Thanks for being so detailed!

                                    I use caddy for straightforward https, but every time I try to use it for a service that isn't just a reverse_proxy entry, I really struggle to find resources I understand... and most of the time the "solutions" I find are outdated and don't seem to work. The most recent example of this for me would be Baikal.

                                    Do you have any recommendations for where I might get good examples and learn more about how do troubleshoot and improve my Caddyfile entries?

                                    Thanks!

                                    mouse@midwest.socialM This user is from outside of this forum
                                    mouse@midwest.socialM This user is from outside of this forum
                                    [email protected]
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #24

                                    Unfortunately that's one area I am bad with, I tend to use reverse_proxy for most such as Baikal running with the ckulka/baikal Docker image (which runs Nginx or Apache), otherwise I only static sites.

                                    I'd start by looking at Baikal's config for Apache and Nginx, https://sabre.io/baikal/install/ and comparing to the directives for Caddy, https://caddyserver.com/docs/caddyfile/directives and

                                    Since it uses PHP, it will need that, https://caddyserver.com/docs/caddyfile/patterns#php

                                    Upon my searches I came across this, it talks about running Baikal with Caddy specifically. https://github.com/caddyserver/caddy/issues/497

                                    I hope that this provided some helpful directions.

                                    1 Reply Last reply
                                    0
                                    • ? Guest

                                      Maybe this is more of a home lab question, but I'm utterly clueless regarding PKI and HTTPS certs, despite taking more than one class that goes into some detail about how the system works. I've tried finding guides on how to set up your own CA, but my eyes glaze over after the third or fourth certificate you have to generate.

                                      Anyway, I know you need a public DNS record for HTTPS to work, and it struck me recently that I do in fact own a domain name that I currently use as my DNS suffix on my LAN. Is there a way I can get Let's Encrypt to dole out a wildcard certificate I can use on the hosts in my LAN so I don't have to fiddle with every machine that uses every service I'm hosting? If so, is there a guide for the brain dead one could point me to? Maybe doing this will help me grock the whole PKI thing.

                                      mangopenguin@lemmy.blahaj.zoneM This user is from outside of this forum
                                      mangopenguin@lemmy.blahaj.zoneM This user is from outside of this forum
                                      [email protected]
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #25

                                      LetsEncrypt.

                                      1 Reply Last reply
                                      0
                                      • ? Guest

                                        Maybe this is more of a home lab question, but I'm utterly clueless regarding PKI and HTTPS certs, despite taking more than one class that goes into some detail about how the system works. I've tried finding guides on how to set up your own CA, but my eyes glaze over after the third or fourth certificate you have to generate.

                                        Anyway, I know you need a public DNS record for HTTPS to work, and it struck me recently that I do in fact own a domain name that I currently use as my DNS suffix on my LAN. Is there a way I can get Let's Encrypt to dole out a wildcard certificate I can use on the hosts in my LAN so I don't have to fiddle with every machine that uses every service I'm hosting? If so, is there a guide for the brain dead one could point me to? Maybe doing this will help me grock the whole PKI thing.

                                        O This user is from outside of this forum
                                        O This user is from outside of this forum
                                        [email protected]
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #26

                                        With certbot there's probably a plugin to do it automatically, but if you just want to get something working right now you can run the following to manually run a dns challenge against your chosen domain names and get a cert for any specified. This will expire in ~3 months and you'll need to do it again, so I'd recommend throwing it in a cron job and finding the applicable certbot-dns-dnsprovider plugin that will make it run without your input. Once you have it working you can extract the certs from /etc/letsencrypt/live on most systems. Just be aware that the files there are going to be symlinks so you'll want to copy them before tarballing them to move other machines.

                                        certbot --preferred-challenges dns --manual certonly -d *.mydomain.tld -d mydomain.tld -d *.local.mydomain.tld

                                        1 Reply Last reply
                                        0
                                        • ? Guest

                                          Maybe this is more of a home lab question, but I'm utterly clueless regarding PKI and HTTPS certs, despite taking more than one class that goes into some detail about how the system works. I've tried finding guides on how to set up your own CA, but my eyes glaze over after the third or fourth certificate you have to generate.

                                          Anyway, I know you need a public DNS record for HTTPS to work, and it struck me recently that I do in fact own a domain name that I currently use as my DNS suffix on my LAN. Is there a way I can get Let's Encrypt to dole out a wildcard certificate I can use on the hosts in my LAN so I don't have to fiddle with every machine that uses every service I'm hosting? If so, is there a guide for the brain dead one could point me to? Maybe doing this will help me grock the whole PKI thing.

                                          douglasg14b@lemmy.worldD This user is from outside of this forum
                                          douglasg14b@lemmy.worldD This user is from outside of this forum
                                          [email protected]
                                          wrote on last edited by
                                          #27

                                          I just:

                                          1. Have my router setup with DNS for domains I want to direct locally, and point them to:
                                          2. Have a reverse proxy that has auto- certbot behavior (caddy) connected to the cloud flair API
                                          3. Navigation I do within my local network to these domains gives me real certificates.
                                          C L 2 Replies Last reply
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