Nginx as reverse proxy with acme (letsencrypt)

From Alpine Linux

Introduction

This setup will allow you to have multiple servers/containers be accessible via a single IP address with the added benefit of centralized generation of letsencrypt certificates and secure https (according to ssllabs ssltest).

Installation

For this howto we need two tools, NGINX and acme-client. lets install them.

apk add nginx acme-client

Setup

NGINX

Global configuration

First step is to refactor our global nginx.conf. Its target at a low traffic http server, to increase performance make changes at top level.

The security settings are taken from https://cipherli.st . Please also read https://hstspreload.org for details about HSTS.

# ngnix configuration file

user  nginx;

worker_processes  1; # use "auto" to use all available cores (high performance)

events {
    worker_connections  1024; # increase if you need more connections
}

http {
    # server_names_hash_bucket_size controls the maximum length
    # of a virtual host entry (ie the length of the domain name).
    server_names_hash_bucket_size   64;
    server_tokens                   off; # hide who we are
    sendfile                        off; # can cause issues

    # secure nginx according to https://cipherli.st/
    ssl_protocols TLSv1 TLSv1.1 TLSv1.2;
    ssl_prefer_server_ciphers on;
    ssl_ciphers "EECDH+AESGCM:EDH+AESGCM:AES256+EECDH:AES256+EDH";
    ssl_ecdh_curve secp384r1; # Requires nginx >= 1.1.0
    ssl_session_cache shared:SSL:10m;
    ssl_session_tickets off; # Requires nginx >= 1.5.9
    ssl_stapling on; # Requires nginx >= 1.3.7
    ssl_stapling_verify on; # Requires nginx => 1.3.7
    resolver 8.8.8.8 8.8.4.4 valid=300s;
    resolver_timeout 5s;
    add_header Strict-Transport-Security "max-age=63072000"; # https://hstspreload.org
    add_header X-Frame-Options DENY;
    add_header X-Content-Type-Options nosniff;

    ssl_dhparam dhparam.pem;

    # nginx will find this file in the config directory set at nginx build time
    include mime.types;

    #fallback in case we can't determine a type
    default_type application/octet-stream;

    # buffering causes issues
    proxy_buffering off;

    # include hosts
    include conf.d/*.conf;
}

Diffie–Hellman Parameters

In the above configuration ssl_dhparam is used so we need to generate a global dhparam file. We want to use a 4096 key size but this can take a very long time. Because of this we are adding an extra option (dsaparam) to generate our dhparam file (see: https://wiki.openssl.org/index.php/Manual:Dhparam(1)#OPTIONS)

openssl dhparam -dsaparam -out /etc/nginx/dhparam.pem 4096

At this point you should be able to (re)start your nginx server but it will not use any of the security features (yet).

Per site configuration files (conf.d)

Since Alpine v3.5 we ship NGINX with an default.conf within the /etc/nginx/conf.d directory. To add support for another website you can add files with the .conf extension to this directory.

/etc/nginx/conf.d/alpinelinux.org.conf:
server {
    listen        80;
    server_name   alpinelinux.org;

    location / {
        include			conf.d/proxy_set_header.inc;
        proxy_pass		http://downstream_http_server_host;
    }
}

Common configuration includes

If you need to setup multiple proxy setups you can include duplicated data like shown below.

proxy_set_header.inc:
proxy_set_header    X-Forwarded-By       $server_addr:$server_port;
proxy_set_header    X-Forwarded-For      $remote_addr;
proxy_set_header    X-Forwarded-Proto    $scheme;
proxy_set_header    Host                 $host;

acme-client

To allow NGINX to support https we need to add certificates and support for ACME (Automatic Certificate Management Environment) responses.

ACME responses

/etc/nginx/conf.d/acme.inc
location /.well-known/acme-challenge {
    alias /var/www/acme;
}

And add this to your proxy configuration

/etc/nginx/conf.d/alpinelinux.org.conf