Rancher Active Proxy is an all-in-one reverse proxy for Rancher, supporting Letsencrypt out of the box !
Rancher Active Proxy is based on the excellent idea of jwilder/nginx-proxy.
Rancher Active Proxy replace docker-gen by Rancher-gen-rap adi90x/rancher-gen-rap ( a fork of the also excellent janeczku/go-rancher-gen adding some more function )
Rancher Active Proxy use label instead of environmental value.
I would recommend to use latest image from DockerHub or you can use tag versions. Keep in mind that branch are mostly development features and could not work as expected.
Add https://github.com/adi90x/rancher-active-proxy.git
to your custom catalog list( Rancher > Admin > Settings ).
Then go to catalog and install Rancher Active Proxy !
Minimal Params To run it:
$ docker run -d -p 80:80 adi90x/rancher-active-proxy
Then start any containers you want proxied with a label rap.host=subdomain.youdomain.com
$ docker run -l rap.host=foo.bar.com ...
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
.
Provided your DNS is setup to forward foo.bar.com to the a host running rancher-active-proxy
, the request will be routed to a container with the rap.host
label set.
Label | Description |
---|---|
rap.host |
Virtual host to use ( several value could be separate by , ) |
rap.port |
Port of the container to use ( only needed if several port are exposed ). Default Expose Port or 80 |
rap.proto |
Protocol used to contact container ( http,https,uwsgi ). Default : http |
rap.timeout |
Timeout for reading from this container ( in seconds ). Default : nginx default (60s) |
rap.cert_name |
Certificate name to use for the virtual host. Default rap.host |
rap.https_method |
Https method (redirect, noredirect, nohttps). Default : redirect |
rap.le_host |
Certificate to create/renew with Letsencrypt |
rap.le_email |
Email to use for Letsencrypt |
rap.le_test |
Set to true to use stagging letsencrypt server |
rap.le_bypass |
Set to true to create a special bypass to use LE |
rap.http_listen_ports |
External Port you want Rancher-Active-Proxy to listen to http for this server ( Default : 80 ) |
rap.https_listen_ports |
External Port you want Rancher-Active-Proxy to listen to https for this server ( Default : 443 ) |
rap.server_tokens |
Enable to specify the server_token value per container |
rap.client_max_body_size |
Enable to specify the client_max_body_size directive per container |
rap.rap_name |
If RAP_NAME is specified for a RAP instance only container with label value matching RAP_NAME value will be publish |
Label | Description |
---|---|
DEBUG |
Set to true to enable more output. Default : False |
CRON |
Cron like expression to define when certs are renew. Default : 0 2 * * * |
DEFAULT_HOST |
Default Nginx host. |
DEFAULT_EMAIL |
Default Email for Letsencrypt. |
RAP_DEBUG |
Define Rancher-Gen-Rap verbosity (Valid values: "debug", "info", "warn", and "error"). Default: info |
DEFAULT_PORT |
Default port use for containers ( Default : 80 ) |
SPECIFIC_HOST |
Limit RAP to only containers of a specific host name |
RAP_NAME |
If specify RAP will only publish service with rap.rap_name = RAP_NAME |
Path | Description |
---|---|
/etc/letsencrypt |
Folder with all certificates used for https and Letsencrypt parameters |
/etc/nginx/htpasswd |
Basic Authentication Support ( file should be rap.host ) |
/etc/nginx/vhost.d |
Specifc vhost configuration ( file should be rap.host ) . Location configuration should end with _location |
Rancher Active Proxy is also able to work for standalone containers on the host it is launched.
There is only one limit to this : You should not use the same host name ( rap.host
label ) for a standalone container and for a service.
This feature even enables you to proxy rancher-server, just start it with something like that :
docker run -d --restart=unless-stopped -p 8080:8080 --name=rancher-server -l rap.host=admin.foo.com -l rap.port=8080 -l rap.le_host=admin.foo.com -l rap.le_email=foo@bar.com -l io.rancher.container.pull_image=always rancher/server
In this case admin.foo.com
will enable you to acces rancher administration, but it is better to keep port 8080 exposed and use http://foo.com:8080
as the host registration URL.
Rancher Active Proxy is using certbot
from Let's Encrypt in order to automatically get SSL certificates for containers.
In order to enable that feature you need to add rap.le_host
label to the container ( you probably want it to be equal to rap.host
)
And you should either start Rancher Active Proxy with environment variable DEFAULT_EMAIL
or specify rap.le_email
as a container label.
If you are developing I recommend to add rap.le_test=true
to the container in order to use Let's Encrypt staging environment and to not exceed limits.
Rancher Active Proxy support SAN certifcates ( one certificate for several domains ).
To create a SAN certificate you need to separate hostnames with ";" ( instead of "," for separate domains)
rap.le_host=admin.foo.com;api.foo.com;mail.foo.com
This will create a single certificate matching : admin.foo.com, api.foo.com, mail.foo.com .
The certificate created will be named admin.foo.com
but symlink will be create to match all domains.
If your container exposes multiple ports, Rancher Active Proxy will use rap.port
label, then use the exposed port if there is only one port exposed, or default to DEFAULT_PORT
environmental variable ( which is set by default to 80
).
Or you can try your hand at the Advanced rap.host
syntax.
If your container uses its own letsencrypt process to get some certificates
Set rap.le_bypass
to true
to add a location to the http server block to forward /.well-known/acme-certificate/
to upstream through http instead of redirecting it to https
Using the Advanced rap.host
syntax you can specify multiple host names to each go to their own backend port.
Basically this provides support for rap.host
, rap.port
, and rap.proto
all in one field.
For example, given the following:
rap.host=api.example.com=>http:80,api-admin.example.com=>http:8001,secure.example.com=>https:8443
This would yield 3 different server/upstream configurations...
- Requests for api.example.com would route to this container's port 80 via http
- Requests for api-admin.example.com would route to this containers port 8001 via http
- Requests for secure.example.com would route to this containers port 8443 via https
If needed you can use Rancher-Active-Proxy to listen for different ports.
docker run -d -p 8081:8081 -p 81:81 adi90x/rancher-active-proxy
In this case, you can specify on which port Rancher Active Proxy should listen for a specific hostname :
docker run -d -l rap.host=foo.bar.com -l rap.http_listen_ports="81,8081" -l rap.port="53" containerexposing/port53
In this situation Rancher Active Proxy will listen for request matching rap.host
on both port 81
and 8081
of your host
and route those request to port 53
of your container.
Likewise, rap.https_listen_ports
will work for https requests.
If you are not using port 80
and 443
at all you won't be able to use Let's Encrypt Automatic certificates.
Using environmental value SPECIFIC_HOST
you can limit Rancher Active Proxy to containers running on a single host.
Just start Rancher Active Proxy like that : docker run -d -p 80:80 -e SPECIFIC_HOST=Hostnameofthehost adi90x/rancher-active-proxy
Rancher Active Proxy provides an easy script to revoke/delete a certificate.
You can run it : docker run adi90x/rancher-active-proxy /app/remove DomainCertToRemove
Script is adding '*' at the end of the command therefore /app/remove foo
will delete foo.bar.com , foo.bar.org, foo.bar2.com ..
Special attention: If you are using it with SAN certificates you need to be careful and run it for each domain in the SAN certificate.
Do not forget to delete the label on the container before using that script or it will be recreated on next update.
If you are starting it with Rancher do not forget to set Auto Restart : Never (Start Once)
If you want to 100% personalize your server section on a per-rap.host
basis, add your server configuration in a file under /etc/nginx/vhost.d
The file should use the suffix _server
.
For example, if you have a virtual host named app.example.com
and you have configured a proxy_cache my-cache
in another custom file, you could tell it to use a proxy cache as follows:
$ docker run -d -p 80:80 -p 443:443 -v /path/to/vhost.d:/etc/nginx/vhost.d:ro adi90x/rancher-active-proxy
You should therefore have a file app.example.com_server
in the /etc/nginx/vhost.d
folder that contains the whole server block you want to use :
server {
server_name app.example.com
listen 80;
access_log /var/log/nginx/access.log vhost;
location / {
proxy_pass http://app.example.com;
}
}
If you are using multiple hostnames for a single container (e.g. rap.host=example.com,www.example.com
), the virtual host configuration file must exist for each hostname.
If you would like to use the same configuration for multiple virtual host names, you can use a symlink.
If you want most of your virtual hosts to use a default single server
block configuration and then override it on a few specific ones, add a /etc/nginx/vhost.d/default_server
file.
This file will be used on any virtual host which does not have a /etc/nginx/vhost.d/{rap.host}_server
file associated with it.
If you want a RAP instance to only publish some specific containers/services, you can start the RAP container with environment variable RAP_NAME = example
In that situation, all containers to be published by this instance of RAP should have a label rap.rap_name = example
If a container should be published by several RAP instances just use a label matching regex like rap.rap_name = internal,external
to be published by RAP instance named internal
or external
The below part is mostly taken from jwilder/nginx-proxy README and modified to reflect Rancher Active Proxy
If you need to support multiple virtual hosts for a container, you can separate each entry with commas. For example, foo.bar.com,baz.bar.com,bar.com
and each host will be setup the same.
You can also use wildcards at the beginning and the end of host name, like *.bar.com
or foo.bar.*
. Or even a regular expression, which can be very useful in conjunction with a wildcard DNS service like xip.io, using ~^foo\.bar\..*\.xip\.io
will match foo.bar.127.0.0.1.xip.io
, foo.bar.10.0.2.2.xip.io
and all other given IPs. More information about this topic can be found in the nginx documentation about server_names
.
If you would like the reverse proxy to connect to your backend using HTTPS instead of HTTP
set rap.proto=https
on the backend container.
If you would like to connect to uWSGI backend, set rap.proto=uwsgi
on the backend container.
Your backend container should than listen on a port rather than a socket and expose that port.
To set the default host for nginx use the env var DEFAULT_HOST=foo.bar.com
for example :
$ docker run -d -p 80:80 -e DEFAULT_HOST=foo.bar.com adi90x/rancher-active-proxy
SSL is supported using single host, wildcard and SNI certificates using naming conventions for certificates or optionally specifying a cert name (for SNI) as an environment variable.
To enable SSL:
$ docker run -d -p 80:80 -p 443:443 -v /path/to/certs:/etc/nginx/certs adi90x/rancher-active-proxy
The contents of /path/to/certs
should contain the certificates and private keys for any virtual
hosts in use. The certificate and keys should be named after the virtual host with a .crt
and
.key
extension. For example, a container with label rap.host=foo.bar.com
should have a
foo.bar.com.crt
and foo.bar.com.key
file in the certs directory.
If you are running the container in a virtualized environment (Hyper-V, VirtualBox, etc...),
/path/to/certs
must exist in that environment or be made accessible to that environment.
By default, Docker is not able to mount directories on the host machine to containers running in a virtual machine.
If you have Diffie-Hellman groups enabled, the files should be named after the virtual host with a
dhparam
suffix and .pem
extension. For example, a container with rap.host=foo.bar.com
should have a foo.bar.com.dhparam.pem
file in the certs directory.
Wildcard certificates and keys should be named after the domain name with a .crt
and .key
extension.
For example rap.host=foo.bar.com
would use cert name bar.com.crt
and bar.com.key
.
If your certificate(s) supports multiple domain names, you can start a container with rap.cert_name=<name>
to identify the certificate to be used. For example, a certificate for *.foo.com
and *.bar.com
could be named shared.crt
and shared.key
. A container running with rap.host=foo.bar.com
and rap.cert_name=shared
will then use this shared cert.
The SSL cipher configuration is based on mozilla nginx intermediate profile which should provide compatibility with clients back to Firefox 1, Chrome 1, IE 7, Opera 5, Safari 1, Windows XP IE8, Android 2.3, Java 7. The configuration also enables HSTS, and SSL session caches.
The default behavior for the proxy when port 80 and 443 are exposed is as follows:
- If a container has a usable cert, port 80 will redirect to 443 for that container so that HTTPS is always preferred when available.
- If the container does not have a usable cert, a 503 will be returned.
Note that in the latter case, a browser may get an connection error as no certificate is available
to establish a connection. A self-signed or generic cert named default.crt
and default.key
will allow a client browser to make a SSL connection (likely w/ a warning) and subsequently receive
a 503.
To serve traffic in both SSL and non-SSL modes without redirecting to SSL, you can include the
label rap.https_method=noredirect
(the default is rap.https_method=redirect
). You can also
disable the non-SSL site entirely with rap.https_method=nohttp
. rap.https_method
must be specified
on each container for which you want to override the default behavior. If rap.https_method=noredirect
is
used, Strict Transport Security (HSTS) is disabled to prevent HTTPS users from being redirected by the
client. If you cannot get to the HTTP site after changing this setting, your browser has probably cached
the HSTS policy and is automatically redirecting you back to HTTPS. You will need to clear your browser's
HSTS cache or use an incognito window / different browser.
In order to be able to secure your virtual host, you have to create a file named as its equivalent rap.host
label on directory
/etc/nginx/htpasswd/rap.host
$ docker run -d -p 80:80 -p 443:443 \
-v /path/to/htpasswd:/etc/nginx/htpasswd \
-v /path/to/certs:/etc/nginx/certs \
adi90x/rancher-active-proxy
You'll need apache2-utils on the machine where you plan to create the htpasswd file. Or you can use an nginx container to create the file ( using OpenSSL as explained in Nginx Readme )
docker run -it nginx printf "Username_to_use:$(openssl passwd -crypt Password_to_use)\n" >> /path/to/htpasswd/{rap.host}
A default htpasswd can be used to secure all hosts using this proxy. Good for development environments to keep prying eyes out. To use, create the htpasswd file named 'default' here: /etc/nginx/htpasswd/default
.
If you need to configure Nginx beyond what is possible using environment variables, you can provide custom configuration files on either a proxy-wide or per-rap.host
basis.
If you want to replace the default proxy settings for the nginx container, add a configuration file at /etc/nginx/proxy.conf
. A file with the default settings would
look like this:
# HTTP 1.1 support
proxy_http_version 1.1;
proxy_buffering off;
proxy_set_header Host $http_host;
proxy_set_header Upgrade $http_upgrade;
proxy_set_header Connection $proxy_connection;
proxy_set_header X-Real-IP $remote_addr;
proxy_set_header X-Forwarded-For $proxy_add_x_forwarded_for;
proxy_set_header X-Forwarded-Proto $proxy_x_forwarded_proto;
proxy_set_header X-Forwarded-Port $proxy_x_forwarded_port;
# Mitigate httpoxy attack (see README for details)
proxy_set_header Proxy "";
NOTE: If you provide this file it will replace the defaults; you may want to check the nginx.tmpl file to make sure you have all of the needed options.
NOTE: The default configuration blocks the Proxy
HTTP request header from being sent to downstream servers. This prevents attackers from using the so-called httpoxy attack. There is no legitimate reason for a client to send this header, and there are many vulnerable languages / platforms (CVE-2016-5385
, CVE-2016-5386
, CVE-2016-5387
, CVE-2016-5388
, CVE-2016-1000109
, CVE-2016-1000110
, CERT-VU#797896
).
To add settings on a proxy-wide basis, add your configuration file under /etc/nginx/conf.d
using a name ending in .conf
.
This can be done in a derived image by creating the file in a RUN
command or by COPY
ing the file into conf.d
:
FROM adi90x/rancher-active-proxy
RUN { \
echo 'server_tokens off;'; \
echo 'client_max_body_size 100m;'; \
} > /etc/nginx/conf.d/my_proxy.conf
Or it can be done by mounting in your custom configuration in your docker run
command:
$ docker run -d -p 80:80 -p 443:443 -v /path/to/my_proxy.conf:/etc/nginx/conf.d/my_proxy.conf:ro adi90x/rancher-active-proxy
To add settings on a per-rap.host
basis, add your configuration file under /etc/nginx/vhost.d
. Unlike in the proxy-wide case, which allows multiple config files with any name ending in .conf
, the per-rap.host
file must be named exactly after the rap.host
.
In order to allow virtual hosts to be dynamically configured as backends are added and removed, it makes the most sense to mount an external directory as /etc/nginx/vhost.d
as opposed to using derived images or mounting individual configuration files.
For example, if you have a virtual host named app.example.com
, you could provide a custom configuration for that host as follows:
$ docker run -d -p 80:80 -p 443:443 -v /path/to/vhost.d:/etc/nginx/vhost.d:ro adi90x/rancher-active-proxy
$ { echo 'server_tokens off;'; echo 'client_max_body_size 100m;'; } > /path/to/vhost.d/app.example.com
If you are using multiple hostnames for a single container (e.g. rap.host=example.com,www.example.com
), the virtual host configuration file must exist for each hostname. If you would like to use the same configuration for multiple virtual host names, you can use a symlink:
$ { echo 'server_tokens off;'; echo 'client_max_body_size 100m;'; } > /path/to/vhost.d/www.example.com
$ ln -s /path/to/vhost.d/www.example.com /path/to/vhost.d/example.com
If you want most of your virtual hosts to use a default single configuration and then override on a few specific ones, add those settings to the /etc/nginx/vhost.d/default
file. This file
will be used on any virtual host which does not have a /etc/nginx/vhost.d/{rap.host}
file associated with it.
To add settings to the "location" block on a per-rap.host
basis, add your configuration file under /etc/nginx/vhost.d
just like the previous section except with the suffix _location
.
For example, if you have a virtual host named app.example.com
and you have configured a proxy_cache my-cache
in another custom file, you could tell it to use a proxy cache as follows:
$ docker run -d -p 80:80 -p 443:443 -v /path/to/vhost.d:/etc/nginx/vhost.d:ro adi90x/rancher-active-proxy
$ { echo 'proxy_cache my-cache;'; echo 'proxy_cache_valid 200 302 60m;'; echo 'proxy_cache_valid 404 1m;' } > /path/to/vhost.d/app.example.com_location
If you are using multiple hostnames for a single container (e.g. rap.host=example.com,www.example.com
), the virtual host configuration file must exist for each hostname. If you would like to use the same configuration for multiple virtual host names, you can use a symlink:
$ { echo 'proxy_cache my-cache;'; echo 'proxy_cache_valid 200 302 60m;'; echo 'proxy_cache_valid 404 1m;' } > /path/to/vhost.d/app.example.com_location
$ ln -s /path/to/vhost.d/www.example.com /path/to/vhost.d/example.com
If you want most of your virtual hosts to use a default single location
block configuration and then override on a few specific ones, add those settings to the /etc/nginx/vhost.d/default_location
file. This file
will be used on any virtual host which does not have a /etc/nginx/vhost.d/{rap.host}
file associated with it.
Do not hesitate to send issues or pull requests !
Automated Gitlab CI is used to build Rancher Active Proxy therefore send any pull request/issues to Rancher Active Proxy on Gitlab.com