We've renamed our go module, from version 2.7.0 forward you should import caddy-docker-proxy using github.com/lucaslorentz/caddy-docker-proxy/v2
or a specific version github.com/lucaslorentz/caddy-docker-proxy/[email protected]
.
The old name github.com/lucaslorentz/caddy-docker-proxy/plugin
will be a available for backwards compatibility, but it will not have the latest version.
This plugin enables Caddy to be used as a reverse proxy for Docker containers via labels.
The plugin scans Docker metadata, looking for labels indicating that the service or container should be served by Caddy.
Then, it generates an in-memory Caddyfile with site entries and proxies pointing to each Docker service by their DNS name or container IP.
Every time a Docker object changes, the plugin updates the Caddyfile and triggers Caddy to gracefully reload, with zero-downtime.
- Basic usage example, using docker-compose
- Labels to Caddyfile conversion
- Template functions
- Examples
- Docker configs
- Proxying services vs containers
- Execution modes
- Caddy CLI
- Docker images
- Connecting to Docker Host
- Volumes
- Trying it
- Building it
$ docker network create caddy
caddy/docker-compose.yml
version: "3.7"
services:
caddy:
image: lucaslorentz/caddy-docker-proxy:ci-alpine
ports:
- 80:80
- 443:443
environment:
- CADDY_INGRESS_NETWORKS=caddy
networks:
- caddy
volumes:
- /var/run/docker.sock:/var/run/docker.sock
- caddy_data:/data
restart: unless-stopped
networks:
caddy:
external: true
volumes:
caddy_data: {}
$ docker-compose up -d
whoami/docker-compose.yml
version: '3.7'
services:
whoami:
image: traefik/whoami
networks:
- caddy
labels:
caddy: whoami.example.com
caddy.reverse_proxy: "{{upstreams 80}}"
networks:
caddy:
external: true
$ docker-compose up -d
Now, visit https://whoami.example.com
. The site will be served automatically over HTTPS with a certificate issued by Let's Encrypt or ZeroSSL.
Please first read the Caddyfile Concepts documentation to understand the structure of a Caddyfile.
Any label prefixed with caddy
will be converted into a Caddyfile config, following these rules:
Keys are the directive name, and values are whitespace separated arguments:
caddy.directive: arg1 arg2
↓
{
directive arg1 arg2
}
If you need whitespace or line-breaks inside one of the arguments, use double-quotes or backticks around it:
caddy.respond: / "Hello World" 200
↓
{
respond / "Hello World" 200
}
caddy.respond: / `Hello\nWorld` 200
↓
{
respond / `Hello
World` 200
}
caddy.respond: |
/ `Hello
World` 200
↓
{
respond / `Hello
World` 200
}
Dots represent nesting, and grouping is done automatically:
caddy.directive: argA
caddy.directive.subdirA: valueA
caddy.directive.subdirB: valueB1 valueB2
↓
{
directive argA {
subdirA valueA
subdirB valueB1 valueB2
}
}
Arguments for the parent directive are optional (e.g. no arguments to directive
, setting subdirective subdirA
directly):
caddy.directive.subdirA: valueA
↓
{
directive {
subdirA valueA
}
}
Labels with empty values generate a directive without any arguments:
caddy.directive:
↓
{
directive
}
Be aware that directives are subject to be sorted according to the default directive order defined by Caddy, when the Caddyfile is parsed (after the Caddyfile is generated from labels).
Directives from labels are ordered alphabetically by default:
caddy.bbb: value
caddy.aaa: value
↓
{
aaa value
bbb value
}
Suffix _<number> isolates directives that otherwise would be grouped:
caddy.route_0.a: value
caddy.route_1.b: value
↓
{
route {
a value
}
route {
b value
}
}
Prefix <number>_ isolates directives but also defines a custom ordering for directives (mainly relevant within route
blocks), and directives without order prefix will go last:
caddy.1_bbb: value
caddy.2_aaa: value
caddy.3_aaa: value
↓
{
bbb value
aaa value
aaa value
}
A label caddy
creates a site block:
caddy: example.com
caddy.respond: "Hello World" 200
↓
example.com {
respond "Hello World" 200
}
Or a snippet:
caddy: (encode)
caddy.encode: zstd gzip
↓
(encode) {
encode zstd gzip
}
It's also possible to isolate Caddy configurations using suffix _<number>:
caddy_0: (snippet)
caddy_0.tls: internal
caddy_1: site-a.com
caddy_1.import: snippet
caddy_2: site-b.com
caddy_2.import: snippet
↓
(snippet) {
tls internal
}
site_a {
import snippet
}
site_b {
import snippet
}
Global options can be defined by not setting any value for caddy
. They can be set in any container/service, including caddy-docker-proxy itself. Here is an example
caddy.email: [email protected]
↓
{
email [email protected]
}
Named matchers can be created using @
inside labels:
caddy: localhost
[email protected]: /sourcepath /sourcepath/*
caddy.reverse_proxy: @match localhost:6001
↓
localhost {
@match {
path /sourcepath /sourcepath/*
}
reverse_proxy @match localhost:6001
}
Golang templates can be used inside label values to increase flexibility. From templates, you have access to current Docker resource information. But, keep in mind that the structure that describes a Docker container is different from a service.
While you can access a service name like this:
caddy.respond: /info "{{.Spec.Name}}"
↓
respond /info "myservice"
The equivalent to access a container name would be:
caddy.respond: /info "{{index .Names 0}}"
↓
respond /info "mycontainer"
Sometimes it's not possile to have labels with empty values, like when using some UI to manage Docker. If that's the case, you can also use our support for go lang templates to generate empty labels.
caddy.directive: {{""}}
↓
directive
The following functions are available for use inside templates:
Returns all addresses for the current Docker resource separated by whitespace.
For services, that would be the service DNS name when proxy-service-tasks is false, or all running tasks IPs when proxy-service-tasks is true.
For containers, that would be the container IPs.
Only containers/services that are connected to Caddy ingress networks are used.
ingress-networks
, environment variable CADDY_INGRESS_NETWORKS
. You can also specify the ingress network per container/service by adding to it a label caddy_ingress_network
with the network name.
Usage: upstreams [http|https] [port]
Examples:
caddy.reverse_proxy: {{upstreams}}
↓
reverse_proxy 192.168.0.1 192.168.0.2
caddy.reverse_proxy: {{upstreams https}}
↓
reverse_proxy https://192.168.0.1 https://192.168.0.2
caddy.reverse_proxy: {{upstreams 8080}}
↓
reverse_proxy 192.168.0.1:8080 192.168.0.2:8080
caddy.reverse_proxy: {{upstreams http 8080}}
↓
reverse_proxy http://192.168.0.1:8080 http://192.168.0.2:8080
caddy.reverse_proxy: "{{upstreams}}"
↓
reverse_proxy "192.168.0.1 192.168.0.2"
Proxying all requests to a domain to the container
caddy: example.com
caddy.reverse_proxy: {{upstreams}}
Proxying all requests to a domain to a subpath in the container
caddy: example.com
caddy.rewrite: * /target{path}
caddy.reverse_proxy: {{upstreams}}
Proxying requests matching a path, while stripping that path prefix
caddy: example.com
caddy.handle_path: /source/*
caddy.handle_path.0_reverse_proxy: {{upstreams}}
Proxying requests matching a path, rewriting to different path prefix
caddy: example.com
caddy.handle_path: /source/*
caddy.handle_path.0_rewrite: * /target{uri}
caddy.handle_path.1_reverse_proxy: {{upstreams}}
Proxying all websocket requests, and all requests to /api*
, to the container
caddy: example.com
[email protected]_header: Connection *Upgrade*
[email protected]_header: Upgrade websocket
caddy.0_reverse_proxy: @ws {{upstreams}}
caddy.1_reverse_proxy: /api* {{upstreams}}
Proxying multiple domains, with certificates for each
caddy: example.com, example.org, www.example.com, www.example.org
caddy.reverse_proxy: {{upstreams}}
More community-maintained examples are available in the Wiki.
Note: This is for Docker Swarm only. Alternatively, use
CADDY_DOCKER_CADDYFILE_PATH
or-caddyfile-path
You can also add raw text to your Caddyfile using Docker configs. Just add Caddy label prefix to your configs and the whole config content will be inserted at the beginning of the generated Caddyfile, outside any server blocks.
Caddy docker proxy is able to proxy to swarm services or raw containers. Both features are always enabled, and what will differentiate the proxy target is where you define your labels.
To proxy swarm services, labels should be defined at service level. In a docker-compose file, labels should be inside deploy
, like:
services:
foo:
deploy:
labels:
caddy: service.example.com
caddy.reverse_proxy: {{upstreams}}
Caddy will use service DNS name as target or all service tasks IPs, depending on configuration proxy-service-tasks.
To proxy containers, labels should be defined at container level. In a docker-compose file, labels should be outside deploy
, like:
services:
foo:
labels:
caddy: service.example.com
caddy.reverse_proxy: {{upstreams}}
Each caddy docker proxy instance can be executed in one of the following modes.
Acts as a proxy to your Docker resources. The server starts without any configuration, and will not serve anything until it is configured by a "controller".
In order to make a server discoverable and configurable by controllers, you need to mark it with label caddy_controlled_server
and define the controller network via CLI option controller-network
or environment variable CADDY_CONTROLLER_NETWORK
.
Server instances doesn't need access to Docker host socket and you can run it in manager or worker nodes.
Controller monitors your Docker cluster, generates Caddy configuration and pushes to all servers it finds in your Docker cluster.
When controller instances are connected to more than one network, it is also necessary to define the controller network via CLI option controller-network
or environment variable CADDY_CONTROLLER_NETWORK
.
Controller instances require access to Docker host socket.
A single controller instance can configure all server instances in your cluster.
This mode executes a controller and a server in the same instance and doesn't require additional configuration.
This plugin extends caddy's CLI with the command caddy docker-proxy
.
Run caddy help docker-proxy
to see all available flags.
Usage of docker-proxy:
--caddyfile-path string
Path to a base Caddyfile that will be extended with Docker sites
--envfile
Path to an environment file with environment variables in the KEY=VALUE format to load into the Caddy process
--controller-network string
Network allowed to configure Caddy server in CIDR notation. Ex: 10.200.200.0/24
--ingress-networks string
Comma separated name of ingress networks connecting Caddy servers to containers.
When not defined, networks attached to controller container are considered ingress networks
--docker-sockets
Comma separated docker sockets
When not defined, DOCKER_HOST (or default docker socket if DOCKER_HOST not defined)
--docker-certs-path
Comma separated cert path, you could use empty value when no cert path for the concern index docker socket like cert_path0,,cert_path2
--docker-apis-version
Comma separated apis version, you could use empty value when no api version for the concern index docker socket like cert_path0,,cert_path2
--label-prefix string
Prefix for Docker labels (default "caddy")
--mode
Which mode this instance should run: standalone | controller | server
--polling-interval duration
Interval Caddy should manually check Docker for a new Caddyfile (default 30s)
--event-throttle-interval duration
Interval to throttle caddyfile updates triggered by docker events (default 100ms)
--process-caddyfile
Process Caddyfile before loading it, removing invalid servers (default true)
--proxy-service-tasks
Proxy to service tasks instead of service load balancer (default true)
--scan-stopped-containers
Scan stopped containers and use their labels for Caddyfile generation (default false)
Those flags can also be set via environment variables:
CADDY_DOCKER_CADDYFILE_PATH=<string>
CADDY_DOCKER_ENVFILE=<string>
CADDY_CONTROLLER_NETWORK=<string>
CADDY_INGRESS_NETWORKS=<string>
CADDY_DOCKER_SOCKETS=<string>
CADDY_DOCKER_CERTS_PATH=<string>
CADDY_DOCKER_APIS_VERSION=<string>
CADDY_DOCKER_LABEL_PREFIX=<string>
CADDY_DOCKER_MODE=<string>
CADDY_DOCKER_POLLING_INTERVAL=<duration>
CADDY_DOCKER_PROCESS_CADDYFILE=<bool>
CADDY_DOCKER_PROXY_SERVICE_TASKS=<bool>
CADDY_DOCKER_SCAN_STOPPED_CONTAINERS=<bool>
CADDY_DOCKER_NO_SCOPE=<bool, default scope used>
Check examples folder to see how to set them on a Docker Compose file.
Docker images are available at Docker hub: https://hub.docker.com/r/lucaslorentz/caddy-docker-proxy/
The safest approach is to use a full version numbers like 0.1.3. That way you lock to a specific build version that works well for you.
But you can also use partial version numbers like 0.1. That means you will receive the most recent 0.1.x image. You will automatically receive updates without breaking changes.
Our default images are very small and safe because they only contain Caddy executable. But they're also quite hard to troubleshoot because they don't have shell or any other Linux utilities like curl or dig.
The alpine images variant are based on the Linux Alpine image, a very small Linux distribution with shell and basic utilities tools. Use -alpine
images if you want to trade security and small size for a better troubleshooting experience.
Images with the ci
tag suffix means they were automatically generated by automated builds.
CI images reflect the current state of master branch and their stability is not guaranteed.
You may use CI images if you want to help testing the latest features before they're officially released.
Currently we provide linux x86_64 images by default.
You can also find images for other architectures like arm32v6
images that can be used on Raspberry Pi.
We recently introduced experimental windows containers images with the tag suffix nanoserver-ltsc2022
.
Be aware that this needs to be tested further.
This is an example of how to mount the windows Docker pipe using CLI:
$ docker run --rm -it -v //./pipe/docker_engine://./pipe/docker_engine lucaslorentz/caddy-docker-proxy:ci-nanoserver-ltsc2022
If you need additional Caddy plugins, or need to use a specific version of Caddy, then you may use the builder
variant of the official Caddy Docker image to make your own Dockerfile
.
The main difference from the instructions on the official image is that you must override CMD
to have the container run using the caddy docker-proxy
command provided by this plugin.
ARG CADDY_VERSION=2.6.1
FROM caddy:${CADDY_VERSION}-builder AS builder
RUN xcaddy build \
--with github.com/lucaslorentz/caddy-docker-proxy/v2 \
--with <additional-plugins>
FROM caddy:${CADDY_VERSION}-alpine
COPY --from=builder /usr/bin/caddy /usr/bin/caddy
CMD ["caddy", "docker-proxy"]
The default connection to Docker host varies per platform:
- At Unix:
unix:///var/run/docker.sock
- At Windows:
npipe:////./pipe/docker_engine
You can modify Docker connection using the following environment variables:
- DOCKER_HOST: to set the URL to the Docker server.
- DOCKER_API_VERSION: to set the version of the API to reach, leave empty for latest.
- DOCKER_CERT_PATH: to load the TLS certificates from.
- DOCKER_TLS_VERIFY: to enable or disable TLS verification; off by default.
On a production Docker swarm cluster, it's very important to store Caddy folder on persistent storage. Otherwise Caddy will re-issue certificates every time it is restarted, exceeding Let's Encrypt's quota.
To do that, map a persistent Docker volume to /data
folder.
For resilient production deployments, use multiple Caddy replicas and map /data
folder to a volume that supports multiple mounts, like Network File Sharing Docker volumes plugins.
Multiple Caddy instances automatically orchestrate certificate issuing between themselves when sharing /data
folder.
Clone this repository.
Deploy the compose file to swarm cluster:
$ docker stack deploy -c examples/standalone.yaml caddy-docker-demo
Wait a bit for services to startup...
Now you can access each service/container using different URLs
$ curl -k --resolve whoami0.example.com:443:127.0.0.1 https://whoami0.example.com
$ curl -k --resolve whoami1.example.com:443:127.0.0.1 https://whoami1.example.com
$ curl -k --resolve whoami2.example.com:443:127.0.0.1 https://whoami2.example.com
$ curl -k --resolve whoami3.example.com:443:127.0.0.1 https://whoami3.example.com
$ curl -k --resolve config.example.com:443:127.0.0.1 https://config.example.com
$ curl -k --resolve echo0.example.com:443:127.0.0.1 https://echo0.example.com/sourcepath/something
After testing, delete the demo stack:
$ docker stack rm caddy-docker-demo
$ docker run --name caddy -d -p 443:443 -v /var/run/docker.sock:/var/run/docker.sock lucaslorentz/caddy-docker-proxy:ci-alpine
$ docker run --name whoami0 -d -l caddy=whoami0.example.com -l "caddy.reverse_proxy={{upstreams 80}}" -l caddy.tls=internal traefik/whoami
$ docker run --name whoami1 -d -l caddy=whoami1.example.com -l "caddy.reverse_proxy={{upstreams 80}}" -l caddy.tls=internal traefik/whoami
$ curl -k --resolve whoami0.example.com:443:127.0.0.1 https://whoami0.example.com
$ curl -k --resolve whoami1.example.com:443:127.0.0.1 https://whoami1.example.com
$ docker rm -f caddy whoami0 whoami1
You can build Caddy using xcaddy or caddy docker builder.
Use module name github.com/lucaslorentz/caddy-docker-proxy/v2 to add this plugin to your build.