88bf27a4ac | ||
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Library/LaunchDaemons | ||
etc | ||
README.md | ||
install-caddy |
README.md
Caddy Installer
Works on
- Ubuntu Linux
- macOS Sierra
- probably lots of others
Supports
- systemd (Ubuntu, Fedora, Arch, etc)
- launchd (OS X, macOS, Darwin)
Quick 'n' Dirty
Caddy:
curl -L https://git.daplie.com/Daplie/caddy-installer/raw/master/install-caddy | bash
Caddy + Features:
curl -L https://git.daplie.com/Daplie/caddy-installer/raw/master/install-caddy | bash -s -- search,realip
The default site location is /srv/www/
and the server begins immediately.
http://localhost
Install... the installer
Yes... you install the installer
# download
curl -L https://git.daplie.com/Daplie/caddy-installer/raw/master/install-caddy -o install-caddy
#change permissions
sudo chown root:root ./install-caddy
sudo chmod a+x ./install-caddy
# move
sudo mv ./install-caddy /usr/local/bin/install-caddy
Usage
install-caddy --help
Usage: install-caddy [plugin1,plugin2,...]
Optional arguments (defaults shown)
--os darwin # any of windows darwin linux freebsd openbsd
--arch amd64 # any of arm64 amd64 386 armv5 armv6l armv7l
Features:
DNS,awslambda,cors,expires,filemanager,filter,git,hugo,ipfilter,jsonp,jwt,locale,mailout,minify,multipass,prometheus,ratelimit,realip,search,upload,cloudflare,digitalocean,dnsimple,dyn,gandi,googlecloud,linode,namecheap,ovh,rfc2136,route53,vultr
Where do my websites go?
The default site is /srv/www/localhost
.
If you own a domain (say example.com) then you
should put a new folder in /srv/www
(such as /srv/www/example.com
)
and then edit /etc/caddy/Caddyfile
to include a config such as this:
https://example.com {
root /srv/www/example.com
}
https://www.example.com {
redir https://example.com
}
Start caddy on boot
Startup Scripts are installed by the installer :)
- systemd (Ubuntu, Fedora, Arch, etc)
- launchd (OS X, macOS, Darwin)
Caddy should begin running on ports 80 and 443 as soon as you install it and should automatically start on boot
Caveats
all platforms
go
(in which caddy
is written) doesn't support privilege deescalation
(running on root to bind to port 80 and 443 and then switching to a non-root user).
This isn't usually a problem, however, because the launchers (systemd et al) usually do.
darwin / macOS / OS X
launchd
doesn't support privilege deescalationauthbind
doesn't work on recent versions of OS X
However, you can use ipfw to locally port-forward.
Also, launchd
is a pain to configure.
There's not much in the way of official documuntation...
but there is some great unofficial documentation
and LaunchControl
(direct download)
makes it actually quite easy.
(ignore that the site looks like a 90s spam site - much like MakeMKV - it's actually legit)