I was looking for a way to use a reverse Proxy with my nextcloud snap install, this guid was what I needed. https://github.com/nextcloud-snap/nextcloud-snap/wiki/Putting-the-snap-behind-a-reverse-proxy
First change, what ports nextcloud listens to:
sudo snap set nextcloud ports.http=81 ports.https=444
Install haproxy and append this to the config file in /etc/haproxy/haproxy.cfg
backend nextcloud-http
mode http
balance roundrobin
option forwardfor
option httpchk HEAD /
http-check send ver HTTP/1.1 hdr Host localhost
server nextcloud 127.0.0.1:81 check
timeout connect 4s
timeout server 4s
backend nextcloud-https
mode tcp
balance roundrobin
option httpchk HEAD /
http-check send ver HTTP/1.1 hdr Host localhost
option ssl-hello-chk
server nextcloud 127.0.0.1:444 check
timeout connect 4s
timeout server 4s
And this for the front end, don’t forget to change <domain name> to your domain. nextcloud.example.org
frontend http
bind *:80
mode http
acl host_nextcloud hdr(host) -i <domain name>
use_backend nextcloud-http if host_nextcloud
timeout client 4s
frontend https
bind *:443
mode tcp
tcp-request inspect-delay 5s
tcp-request content accept if { req_ssl_hello_type 1 }
acl host_nextcloud req_ssl_sni -i <domain name>
use_backend nextcloud-https if host_nextcloud
timeout client 4s
Check if everything is correct with
sudo haproxy -c -f /etc/haproxy/haproxy.cfg
and start it.
sudo systemctl enable haproxy
sudo systemctl start haproxy
just do the lets-encrypt stuff again:
nextcloud.enable-https
And it worked for me(Apache)
You must log in or register to comment.
I’ll just stick with docker