This fork of docker-letsencrypt-nginx-proxy-companion uses acme.sh as Let's Encrypt client (instead of simp_le) and brings support for:
- DNS mode challenge
- Wildcard domain certificates
It is based on initial work by @buchdag.
Docker image available on dockerhub as pinidh/letsencrypt-nginx-proxy-companion. It requires pinidh/nginx-proxy.
letsencrypt-nginx-proxy-companion is a lightweight companion container for nginx-proxy.
It handles the automated creation, renewal and use of Let's Encrypt certificates for proxied Docker containers.
Please note that letsencrypt-nginx-proxy-companion no longer supports ACME v1 endpoints. The last tagged version that supports ACME v1 is v1.11
- Automated creation/renewal of Let's Encrypt (or other ACME CAs) certificates using acme.sh.
- Let's Encrypt / ACME domain validation through
http-01
ordns-01
challenge. - Automated update and reload of nginx config on certificate creation/renewal.
- Support creation of Multi-Domain (SAN) Certificates.
- Support creation of wildcard certificates.
- Creation of a Strong Diffie-Hellman Group at startup.
- Work with all versions of docker.
- Your host must be publicly reachable on both port
80
and443
. - Check your firewall rules and do not attempt to block port
80
as that will preventhttp-01
challenges from completing. - For the same reason, you can't use nginx-proxy's
HTTPS_METHOD=nohttp
. - The (sub)domains you want to issue certificates for must correctly resolve to the host.
- Your DNS provider must answer correctly to CAA record requests.
- If your (sub)domains have AAAA records set, the host must be publicly reachable over IPv6 on port
80
and443
.
Three writable volumes must be declared on the nginx-proxy container so that they can be shared with the letsencrypt-nginx-proxy-companion container:
/etc/nginx/certs
to store certificates and private keys (readonly for the nginx-proxy container)./usr/share/nginx/html
to writehttp-01
challenge files.
Additionally, a fourth volume must be declared on the letsencrypt-nginx-proxy-companion container to store acme.sh
configuration and state: /etc/acme.sh
.
Please also read the doc about data persistence.
Example of use:
Start nginx-proxy with the three additional volumes declared:
$ docker run --detach \
--name nginx-proxy \
--publish 80:80 \
--publish 443:443 \
--volume /etc/nginx/certs \
--volume /etc/nginx/vhost.d \
--volume /usr/share/nginx/html \
--volume /var/run/docker.sock:/tmp/docker.sock:ro \
jwilder/nginx-proxy
Binding the host docker socket (/var/run/docker.sock
) inside the container to /tmp/docker.sock
is a requirement of nginx-proxy.
Start the letsencrypt-nginx-proxy-companion container, getting the volumes from nginx-proxy with --volumes-from
:
$ docker run --detach \
--name nginx-proxy-letsencrypt \
--volumes-from nginx-proxy \
--volume /var/run/docker.sock:/var/run/docker.sock:ro \
--volume /etc/acme.sh \
--env "DEFAULT_EMAIL=mail@yourdomain.tld" \
jrcs/letsencrypt-nginx-proxy-companion
The host docker socket has to be bound inside this container too, this time to /var/run/docker.sock
.
Albeit optional, it is recommended to provide a valid default email address through the DEFAULT_EMAIL
environment variable, so that Let's Encrypt can warn you about expiring certificates and allow you to recover your account.
Once both nginx-proxy and letsencrypt-nginx-proxy-companion containers are up and running, start any container you want proxied with environment variables VIRTUAL_HOST
and LETSENCRYPT_HOST
both set to the domain(s) your proxied container is going to use.
VIRTUAL_HOST
control proxying by nginx-proxy and LETSENCRYPT_HOST
control certificate creation and SSL enabling by letsencrypt-nginx-proxy-companion.
Certificates will only be issued for containers that have both VIRTUAL_HOST
and LETSENCRYPT_HOST
variables set to domain(s) that correctly resolve to the host, provided the host is publicly reachable.
$ docker run --detach \
--name your-proxied-app \
--env "VIRTUAL_HOST=subdomain.yourdomain.tld" \
--env "LETSENCRYPT_HOST=subdomain.yourdomain.tld" \
nginx
The containers being proxied must expose the port to be proxied, either by using the EXPOSE
directive in their Dockerfile or by using the --expose
flag to docker run
or docker create
.
If the proxied container listen on and expose another port than the default 80
, you can force nginx-proxy to use this port with the VIRTUAL_PORT
environment variable.
Example using Grafana (expose and listen on port 3000):
$ docker run --detach \
--name grafana \
--env "VIRTUAL_HOST=othersubdomain.yourdomain.tld" \
--env "VIRTUAL_PORT=3000" \
--env "LETSENCRYPT_HOST=othersubdomain.yourdomain.tld" \
--env "LETSENCRYPT_EMAIL=mail@yourdomain.tld" \
grafana/grafana
Repeat Step 3 for any other container you want to proxy.
Please check the docs section or the project's wiki.