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Or you could consider using Caddy instead: https://caddyserver.com/docs/quick-starts/reverse-proxy
+1 for caddy. I had some issues with traefik and switched to caddy and it’s so easy!
Just need to learn the more advanced stuff for the Caddyfile like error redirects and what not.
@fraydabson @krdo been curious about caddy before but I have no reason to switch from nginx-proxy-manager. Has anyone got any experience with both of these ? How do they compare?
Im new with reverse proxies. My understanding is that npm is way easier to do stuff with the UI and you use it to setup the certs and all that.
With caddy it has auto https. So you just need one Caddyfile listing your reverse proxies and that’s it. It just works. No config or anything.
Now if you want to do more advanced stuff like what you would do with nginx conf files, caddy is very expansive with its directives. Setting up redirects or error pages and what not. It’s super simple in the Caddyfile. I’m still learning how to do more complex stuff like if else statements and what not.
@fraydabson Thanks for the explainer. I was recently tempted to try it out but my certs end everything is managed by NPM and didn't really have the time to redo my whole setup but it looms interesting
@krdo I have found Caddy much easier to use than Traefik
I installed npm (Nginx Proxy Manager) without problems before I heard about Caddy.
Npm works well and requires zero maintenance, and it's easy to manually add redirects via the web ui when I start new Docker containers.
"If it works, don't fix it." But if I didn't have npm today I would try Caddy.
Also consider there's a plugin designed to change its config dynamically through docker labels sort of like Traefik, although I can't say I've used it myself.