188 lines
6.8 KiB
Markdown
188 lines
6.8 KiB
Markdown
---
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title: "Traefik Docker DNS Challenge Documentation"
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description: "Learn how to create a certificate with the Let's Encrypt DNS challenge to use HTTPS on a Service exposed with Traefik Proxy. Read the technical documentation."
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---
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# Docker-compose with Let's Encrypt: DNS Challenge
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This guide aims to demonstrate how to create a certificate with the Let's Encrypt DNS challenge to use https on a simple service exposed with Traefik.
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Please also read the [basic example](../basic-example) for details on how to expose such a service.
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## Prerequisite
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For the DNS challenge, you'll need:
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- A working [provider](../../../https/acme.md#providers) along with the credentials allowing to create and remove DNS records.
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!!! info "Variables may vary depending on the Provider."
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Please note this guide may vary depending on the provider you use.
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The only things changing are the names of the variables you will need to define in order to configure your provider so it can create DNS records.
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Please refer the [list of providers](../../../https/acme.md#providers) given right above and replace all the environment variables with the ones described in this documentation.
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## Setup
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- Create a `docker-compose.yml` file with the following content:
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```yaml
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--8<-- "content/user-guides/docker-compose/acme-dns/docker-compose.yml"
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```
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- Replace the environment variables by your own:
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```yaml
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environment:
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- "OVH_ENDPOINT=[YOUR_OWN_VALUE]"
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- "OVH_APPLICATION_KEY=[YOUR_OWN_VALUE]"
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- "OVH_APPLICATION_SECRET=[YOUR_OWN_VALUE]"
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- "OVH_CONSUMER_KEY=[YOUR_OWN_VALUE]"
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```
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- Replace `postmaster@example.com` by your **own email** within the `certificatesresolvers.myresolver.acme.email` command line argument of the `traefik` service.
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- Replace `whoami.example.com` by your **own domain** within the `traefik.http.routers.whoami.rule` label of the `whoami` service.
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- Optionally uncomment the following lines if you want to test/debug:
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```yaml
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#- "--log.level=DEBUG"
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#- "--certificatesresolvers.myresolver.acme.caserver=https://acme-staging-v02.api.letsencrypt.org/directory"
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```
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- Run `docker-compose up -d` within the folder where you created the previous file.
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- Wait a bit and visit `https://your_own_domain` to confirm everything went fine.
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!!! Note
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If you uncommented the `acme.caserver` line, you will get an SSL error, but if you display the certificate and see it was emitted by `Fake LE Intermediate X1` then it means all is good.
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(It is the staging environment intermediate certificate used by Let's Encrypt).
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You can now safely comment the `acme.caserver` line, remove the `letsencrypt/acme.json` file and restart Traefik to issue a valid certificate.
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## Explanation
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What changed between the initial setup:
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- We configure a second entry point for the https traffic:
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```yaml
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command:
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# Traefik will listen to incoming request on the port 443 (https)
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- "--entryPoints.websecure.address=:443"
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ports:
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- "443:443"
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```
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- We configure the DNS Let's Encrypt challenge:
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```yaml
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command:
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# Enable a dns challenge named "myresolver"
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- "--certificatesresolvers.myresolver.acme.dnschallenge=true"
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# Tell which provider to use
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- "--certificatesresolvers.myresolver.acme.dnschallenge.provider=ovh"
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# The email to provide to Let's Encrypt
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- "--certificatesresolvers.myresolver.acme.email=postmaster@example.com"
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```
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- We provide the required configuration to our provider via environment variables:
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```yaml
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environment:
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- "OVH_ENDPOINT=xxx"
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- "OVH_APPLICATION_KEY=xxx"
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- "OVH_APPLICATION_SECRET=xxx"
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- "OVH_CONSUMER_KEY=xxx"
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```
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!!! Note
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This is the step that may vary depending on the provider you use.
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Just define the variables required by your provider.
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(see the prerequisite for a list)
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- We add a volume to store our certificates:
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```yaml
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volumes:
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# Create a letsencrypt dir within the folder where the docker-compose file is
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- "./letsencrypt:/letsencrypt"
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command:
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# Tell to store the certificate on a path under our volume
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- "--certificatesresolvers.myresolver.acme.storage=/letsencrypt/acme.json"
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```
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- We configure the `whoami` service to tell Traefik to use the certificate resolver named `myresolver` we just configured:
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```yaml
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labels:
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- "traefik.http.routers.whoami.tls.certresolver=myresolver" # Uses the Host rule to define which certificate to issue
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```
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## Use Secrets
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To configure the provider, and avoid having the secrets exposed in plaintext within the docker-compose environment section,
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you could use docker secrets.
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The point is to manage those secret files by another mean, and read them from the `docker-compose.yml` file making the docker-compose file itself less sensitive.
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- Create a directory named `secrets`, and create a file for each parameters required to configure you provider containing the value of the parameter:
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for example, the `ovh_endpoint.secret` file contain `ovh-eu`
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```text
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./secrets
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├── ovh_application_key.secret
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├── ovh_application_secret.secret
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├── ovh_consumer_key.secret
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└── ovh_endpoint.secret
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```
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!!! Note
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You could store those secrets anywhere on the server,
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just make sure to use the proper path for the `file` directive for the secrets definition in the `docker-compose.yml` file.
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- Use this `docker-compose.yml` file:
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```yaml
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--8<-- "content/user-guides/docker-compose/acme-dns/docker-compose_secrets.yml"
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```
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!!! Note
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Still think about changing `postmaster@example.com` & `whoami.example.com` by your own values.
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Let's explain a bit what we just did:
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- The following section allow to read files on the docker host, and expose those file under `/run/secrets/[NAME_OF_THE_SECRET]` within the container:
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```yaml
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secrets:
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# secret name also used to name the file exposed within the container
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ovh_endpoint:
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# path on the host
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file: "./secrets/ovh_endpoint.secret"
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ovh_application_key:
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file: "./secrets/ovh_application_key.secret"
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ovh_application_secret:
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file: "./secrets/ovh_application_secret.secret"
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ovh_consumer_key:
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file: "./secrets/ovh_consumer_key.secret"
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services:
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traefik:
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# expose the predefined secret to the container by name
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secrets:
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- "ovh_endpoint"
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- "ovh_application_key"
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- "ovh_application_secret"
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- "ovh_consumer_key"
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```
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- The environment variable within our `traefik` service are suffixed by `_FILE` which allow us to point to files containing the value, instead of exposing the value itself.
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The acme client will read the content of those file to get the required configuration values.
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```yaml
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environment:
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# expose the path to file provided by docker containing the value we want for OVH_ENDPOINT.
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- "OVH_ENDPOINT_FILE=/run/secrets/ovh_endpoint"
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- "OVH_APPLICATION_KEY_FILE=/run/secrets/ovh_application_key"
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- "OVH_APPLICATION_SECRET_FILE=/run/secrets/ovh_application_secret"
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- "OVH_CONSUMER_KEY_FILE=/run/secrets/ovh_consumer_key"
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```
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