• sum_yung_gai@lemm.eeOP
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    1 year ago

    I have a reverse proxy(traefik) on my LAN to handle sub domain service routing. I want https but don’t want to have to install certs on all the clients using the services. I want the s but don’t want my services to be unavailable if my Internet goes down.

    • vividspecter@lemm.ee
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      1 year ago

      I don’t know if cloudflare can do this, but I have a different DDNS + Let’s Encrypt setup and I configure my router to set the same local domain as the public domain (in openwrt it’s local server + local domain although I’m not aware of the distinction between the two). So when requests are sent over LAN (or over a VPN) the router points me to the LAN device directly, rather than needing to go through external DNS. HTTPS still works since to the client it’s the same domain as the certificate is linked to.

      Hope that makes sense as I haven’t fully got my head around it. I just know it works (indeed I just disabled my internet to test, and the services are still accessible over HTTPS).

    • redcalcium@lemmy.institute
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      1 year ago

      Then no, you won’t be able to access your service via https when your internet is down because it’s terminated at cloudlare’s server. You can still access your service directly without https, or with https but with a self-signed certificate.

    • TheDevil@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      If your only goal is working https then as the other comment correctly suggests you can do DNS-01 authentication with Let’s Encrypt + Certbot + Some brand of dyndns

      However the other comment is incorrect in stating that you need to expose a HTTP server. This method means you don’t need to expose anything. For instance if you do it with HA:

      https://github.com/home-assistant/addons/blob/master/letsencrypt/DOCS.md

      Certbot uses the API of your DDNS provider to authenticate the cert request by adding a txt record and then pulls the cert. No proxies no exposed servers and no fuss. Point the A record at your Rfc1918 IP.

      You can then configure your DNS to keep serving cached responses. I think though that ssl will still be broken while your connection is down but you will be able to access your services.