I’ve recently been wondering if Lemmy should switch out NGINX for Caddy, while I hadn’t had experience with Caddy it looks like a great & fast alternative, What do you all think?
EDIT: I meant beehaw not Lemmy as a whole
I’ve recently been wondering if Lemmy should switch out NGINX for Caddy, while I hadn’t had experience with Caddy it looks like a great & fast alternative, What do you all think?
EDIT: I meant beehaw not Lemmy as a whole
Why? What’s wrong with nginx?
While I can’t speak for others, I’ve found NGINX to have weird issues where sometimes it just dies. And I have to manually restart the systemd service.
The configuration files are verbose, and maybe caddy would have better performance? I hadn’t investigated it much
I’m running a lot of services off my nginx reverse proxy. This is my general setup for each subdomain - each in its own config file. I wouldn’t consider this verbose in any way - and it’s never crashed on me
service.conf
server { listen 443 ssl http2; listen [::]:443 ssl http2; server_name [something].0x-ia.moe; include /etc/nginx/acl_local.conf; include /etc/nginx/default_settings.conf; include /etc/nginx/ssl_0x-ia.conf; location / { proxy_pass http://[host]:[port]/; } }
The hidden configs are boilerplate which are easily imported for any applicable service. A set-once set of files isn’t what I would count towards being verbose. 90% of my services use the exact same format.
If a certain service is complicated and needs more config in nginx, it’s going to be the same for caddy.
I don’t know, I prefer it to be easier to set up my proxy especially when it comes to configs, each to their own I guess.
nginx was built for performace, so I doubt caddy would have any significant different in regards to that. I’ve not found config verbosity to be a problem for me, but I guess to each their own. I’m aware I may come across as some gatekeeper - I assure you that is not my intention. It just feels like replacing a perfectly working, battle testing service with another one just because it’s newer is a bit of a waste of resources. Besides - you can do it yourself on your instance. It’s just a load balancer in front of a docker image.
Isn’t caddy battle tested too? And looking into alternatives is not really a waste of resources. It just feels like nginx is not as reliable and likes to drop requests. It’s not just a load balancer, mind you.
I am surprised you’re getting dropped requests. What do the logs say?
I mean not on my personal server, my personal server keeps dying all the time and I got tired of it. I haven’t looked into the logs. But I meant with the recent influx of reddit users, I saw beehaw and lemmy.ml also have 500 errors.
Right. If you’re getting a 500 (I suspect 502 - bad gateway) you’re not dropping requests. That is lemmy itself crapping its pants. Nginx simply tells you the target behind it is doing something wrong. Happens when the lemmy software get overwhelmed.
Oh, sorry I apologize I didn’t know it was lemmy going dead.
No worries! You’re one of today’s lucky ten thousand!
http3 is available in nginx 1.25 if you want to run their current release.
Oh, but is it by default enabled?
no idea, i run 1.24 - i do QUICK termination on CDN either Fastly or Cloudflare
If it’s an option but not supported, well, uh? I don’t think that’s a good argument.