When I first set up my web server I don’t think Caddy was really a sensible choice. It was still immature (The big “version 2” rewrite was in beta). But it’s about five years from when that happened, so I decided to give Caddy a try.

Wow! My config shrank to about 25% from what it was with Nginx. It’s also a lot less stuff to deal with, especially from a personal hosting perspective. As much as I like self-hosting, I’m not like “into” configuring web servers. Caddy made this very easy.

I thought the automatic HTTPS feature was overrated until I used it. The fact is it works effortlessly. I do not need to add paths to certificate files in my config anymore. That’s great. But what’s even better is I do not need to bother with my server notes to once again figure out how to correctly use Certbot when I want to create new certs for subdomains, since Caddy will do it automatically.

I’ve been annoyed with my Nginx config for a while, and kept wishing to find the motivation to streamline it. It started simple, but as I added things to it over the years the complexity in the config file blossomed. But the thing that tipped me over to trying Caddy was seeing the difference between the Nginx and Caddy configurations necessary for Jellyfin. Seriously. Look at what’s necessary for Nginx.

https://jellyfin.org/docs/general/networking/nginx/#https-config-example

In Caddy that became

jellyfin.example.com {
  reverse_proxy internal.jellyfin.host:8096
}

I thought no way this would work. But it did. First try. So, consider this a field report from a happy Caddy convert, and if you’re not using it yet for self-hosting maybe it can simplify things for you, too. It made me happy enough to write about it.

    • @asap
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      5 hours ago

      3 lines of text (which you can copy/paste from an existing entry) beats clicking around a web interface to set things up.

      Plus you can do many more advanced things with Caddy which you can’t do in NPM. Caddy is just easier to use.

    • @[email protected]
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      411 hours ago

      I like NPM, but on a few occasions over the years I’ve used it it has broken irreparably for no reason. There have been times where I couldn’t log in with my credentials, and times when I couldn’t generate SSL certs. Over the last year or so it’s been really solid but there were a couple times I was ready to chuck NPM out the window.

      • @[email protected]
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        110 hours ago

        I had these sorts of issues too, always assumed it was something i’d goofed - but have never had similar with Caddy.

      • @[email protected]
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        111 hours ago

        I can understand that! Portainer recently did the same log in thing to me and I wanted to go crazy.