Containerized fully-functional implementation of NGINX running on Alpine. The container by default is a 'blank slate' that just serves files out of the box. Changing configuration, server blocks and content is accomplished with bind-mounts using a sensible, simple directory structure. The container auto-detects mounted certificates and switches to TLS automatically. [Helper scripts](https://git.asifbacchus.app/ab-docker/ab-nginx/releases) in the git repo make certificate mounting easier, allow for custom docker networks and more. The container by default can be used as a Let’s Encrypt endpoint with tools like certbot.
Throughout this document, I will reference my repository on DockerHub (`asifbacchus/ab-nginx:tag`). You may also feel free to pull directly from my private registry instead, especially if you need signed containers. Simply use `docker.asifbacchus.app/nginx/ab-nginx:tag`. I usually sign major dot-version releases (1.18, 1.19, etc.) as well as the 'latest' image.
Check out the [repo wiki](https://git.asifbacchus.app/ab-docker/ab-nginx/wiki) for detailed examples and documentation about the container and the [helper scripts](https://git.asifbacchus.app/ab-docker/ab-nginx/releases) which are located [here](https://git.asifbacchus.app/ab-docker/ab-nginx/releases).
All content is served from the NGINX default `/usr/share/nginx/html` directory within the container. The default set up serves everything found here and in all child directories. To use your own content (this point of this whole thing, right?) bind-mount your content to the container’s webroot: `-v /my/webstuff:/usr/share/nginx/html`.
### Configuration directory
All configuration is in the `/etc/nginx` directory and its children. Here is the layout of that directory within the container:
Locations with \**starred descriptions** are designed to be overwritten via bind-mounts to customize the container. For more details on all of these files and what they do, please refer to the [repo wiki](https://git.asifbacchus.app/ab-docker/ab-nginx/wiki).
At it’s most basic, all you need to do is mount a directory with content to serve. For more advanced deployments, you can also mount various configurations. In most cases, you’ll also want to mount certificates so that SSL/TLS is an option. Let’s run through some examples:
Any *.conf* files found in `/etc/nginx/config` will be loaded after *nginx.conf* and, thus, take precedence. All config files are read into the HTTP-context. Please note: **only files ending in .conf** will be read by the container!
I suggest dividing your configurations into various files organized by type (i.e. headers.conf, buffers.conf, timeouts.conf, etc.) and putting them all into one directory and bind-mounting that to the container:
```bash
docker run -d --name ab-nginx --restart unless-stopped \
-p 80:80 \
-v ~/web:/usr/share/nginx/html \
-v ~/nginx/config:/etc/nginx/config:ro \
asifbacchus/ab-nginx
```
If you need to change configuration settings, make the changes on the host and save the file(s). Then, restart the container to apply the change:
```bash
docker restart ab-nginx
```
If you want the container to ignore a specific set of configuration options, say you’re testing something, then just rename that file with those configuration options using any extension other than *.conf*. I usually use *.conf.disabled*. Restart the container and that file will be ignored.
More details and examples are found in the [wiki](https://git.asifbacchus.app/ab-docker/ab-nginx/wiki).
If you just want to serve static content from your content/webroot directory, then you can ignore this section entirely. Otherwise, any files found in the `/etc/nginx/sites` directory in the container will be loaded after the configuration files. These files are meant to define the *SERVER*-context. The container has both a secure and non-secure default server block that simply serves everything found in the webroot. Depending on your SSL configuration, the container enables the correct block. You can add additional server blocks or you can override these default servers entirely by bind-mounting over the directory:
The container will automatically update its configuration to use provided certificates. The examples below assume you have all required files in one directory, but you can also mount them all separately. The required files and their locations in the container are:
The container will load a secure configuration automatically, require SSL connections and redirect HTTP to HTTPS. If you want to enforce HSTS, simply set the HSTS environment variable to true by adding `-e HSTS=TRUE` before specifying the container name. Careful about doing this while testing though! Also, certificates should always be mounted read-only (`:ro`) for security reasons!
You may have noticed I also specified the `SERVER_NAMES` variable. This is necessary or SSL will not work since the hostname the server responds to must match the certificate being presented. **Make sure you set this environment variable to match your certificates!** N.B. If you are using your own server-blocks, then this environment variable is **NOT** required – it is only used by the container when auto-configuring the default server-blocks.
| TZ | Set the container time zone for proper logging. | Etc/UTC | Valid IANA TZ values |
| SERVER_NAMES | Space-delimited list of hostnames/FQDNs to which NGINX should respond. Must be "enclosed in quotes". This is only used by the default configuration and would not be applicable if you are using your own server blocks, unless you choose to reference the `/etc/nginx/server_names.conf` file.<br/>If you are using the default configuration and SSL, remember this *must* match your SSL certificates! The default value will only work for for HTTP connections! | "_" (this means "anything") | Valid IANA hostnames |
| HTTP_PORT | Port on which HTTP connections should be accepted. If you set this, make sure you set your port mapping properly! For example, if you set this to 8080 then you need to specify `-p 8080:8080` or something like `-p 12.34.567.89:8080:8080`. In most cases, you don’t need this and should only change the host port mapping. For example `-p 8080:80`. | 80 | Valid unused ports |
| HTTPS_PORT | Port on which HTTPS connections should be accepted. If you set this, make sure you set your port mapping properly! For example, if you set this to 8443 then you need to specify `-p 8443:8443` or something like `-p 12.34.567.89:8443:8443`. In most cases, you don’t need this and should only change the host port mapping. For example `-p 8443:443`. | 443 | Valid unused ports |
| ACCESS_LOG | Turn on/off access logging. The default format is the same as the NGINX default: *combined*. You can specify your own format via configuration files and use it in custom server blocks. | OFF | `ON`, `OFF` |
| HSTS | Activate the HSTS header. Please be sure you know what this means and that your SSL configuration is correct before enabling! | FALSE | Boolean: `TRUE`, `FALSE` |
| TLS13_ONLY | Activate the container's TLS 1.3 configuration. This is a strict TLS 1.3 implementation and does *not* fall back to TLS 1.2. If you still need to support TLS 1.2, then leave this turned off. The TLS 1.2 configuration *does* upgrade to TLS 1.3 where possible. | FALSE | Boolean: `TRUE`, `FALSE` |
Running the container in shell mode is a great way to verify configurations, make sure everything mounted correctly or to see what the defaults are. You have two options: drop to shell before NGINX loads or after.
This is useful to verify where things mounted, etc. This is also useful if some configuration is causing NGINX to panic and shutting down the container. Note that I’m using the `--rm` flag to auto-remove the container when I exit since there is no point in keeping a shell-mode instantiation around.
Remember this container is running Alpine Linux and the shell is ASH. You do *not* have all the bells and whistles of BASH! Also, many commands are run via busybox, so some things may not work exactly like you might be used to in a Debian/Ubuntu environment, for example. As a side note, *ping* is installed and fully functional in this container so that makes troubleshooting a little easier.
The container logs everything to stdout and stderr – in other words, the console. To see what’s going on with NGINX simply use docker’s integrated logging features:
I think that's everything to get you going if you are already familiar with docker and with NGINX in general. If you need more help, please [refer to the wiki](https://git.asifbacchus.app/ab-docker/ab-nginx/wiki). I've explained everything there in detail. Also, check out the [helper scripts](https://git.asifbacchus.app/ab-docker/ab-nginx/releases) especially if you are deploying certificates. The scripts take care of all the docker command-lines for you so you have much less typing!
If I've forgotten anything, you find any bugs or you have suggestions, please file an issue either on my private [git server ](https://git.asifbachus.app/ab-docker/ab-nginx) or on [github](https://github.com/asifbacchus/ab-nginx). Also, I am *not* affiliated with NGINX in any way, so please **do not** bother them with any issues you find with this container. Bother me instead, I actually enjoy it!