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We have had three operators within a few days which ran into the same cause and had not been able to figure out what went wrong. addresses #833, #822 |
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caddy.service | ||
README.md |
systemd unit for caddy
Please do not hesitate to ask on
caddyserver/support
if you have any questions.
Feel free to prepend to your question the username of whoever touched the file most recently,
for example @wmark re systemd: …
.
The provided file is written for systemd version 229 or later!
Quickstart
In the following sections, we will assume that you want to run caddy
as user www-data
and group www-data
, with UID and GID 33.
Adjust this to your liking according to the preferences of your Linux distribution!
groupadd -g 33 www-data
useradd \
-g www-data --no-user-group \
--home-dir /var/www --no-create-home \
--shell /usr/sbin/nologin \
--system --uid 33 www-data
mkdir /etc/caddy
chown -R root:www-data /etc/caddy
mkdir /etc/ssl/caddy
chown -R www-data:root /etc/ssl/caddy
chmod 0770 /etc/ssl/caddy
- Install the unit configuration file:
cp caddy.service /etc/systemd/system/
- Reload the systemd daemon:
systemctl daemon-reload
- Make sure to configure the service unit before starting caddy.
- Start caddy:
systemctl start caddy.service
- Enable the service (automatically start on boot):
systemctl enable caddy.service
- A folder
.caddy
will be created inside the home directory of the user that runs caddy;
you can change that by providing an environment variableHOME
,
i.e.Environment=HOME=/var/lib/caddy
will result in/var/lib/caddy/.caddy
Configuration
- Prefer
systemctl edit
over modifying the unit file directly:systemctl edit caddy.service
to make user-local modificationssystemctl edit --full caddy.service
for system-wide ones
- In most cases it is enough to override arguments in the
ExecStart
directive:
[Service]
; an empty value clears the original (and preceding) settings
ExecStart=
ExecStart=/usr/bin/caddy -conf="/etc/caddy/myCaddy.conf"
- To view the resulting configuration use
systemctl cat caddy
- systemd needs absolute paths, therefore make sure that the path to caddy is correct.
- Double check permissions of your document root path.
The user caddy runs as needs to have access to it. For example:
# caddy would run as www-data:www-data
# serving, in this example: /var/www
sudo -u www-data -g www-data -s \
ls -hlAS /var/www
# Got an error? Revisit permissions!
Tips
-
Use
log stdout
anderrors stderr
in your Caddyfile to fully utilize journald. -
journalctl
is journald's log query tool. -
Did caddy not start? Check the logfiles for any error messages using
journalctl --boot -u caddy.service
-
To follow caddy's log output:
journalctl -f -u caddy.service
-
If your GNU/Linux distribution does not use systemd with journald then check any logfiles in:
/var/log
-
If you have more files that start with
caddy
– like acaddy.timer
,caddy.path
, orcaddy.socket
– then it is important to append.service
.
Although ifcaddy.service
is all you have, then you can just usecaddy
without any extension, such as in:systemctl status caddy
-
You can make other certificates and private key files accessible to a user
www-data
by commandsetfacl
, if you must:
setfacl -m user:www-data:r-- /etc/ssl/private/my.key