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nginx Docker image secure by default.

Avoid the hassle of following security best practices "by hand" each time you need a web server or reverse proxy. Bunkerized-nginx provides generic security configs, settings and tools so you don't need to do it yourself.

Non-exhaustive list of features :

  • HTTPS support with transparent Let's Encrypt automation
  • State-of-the-art web security : HTTP security headers, prevent leaks, TLS hardening, ...
  • Integrated ModSecurity WAF with the OWASP Core Rule Set
  • Automatic ban of strange behaviors
  • Antibot challenge through cookie, javascript, captcha or recaptcha v3
  • Block TOR, proxies, bad user-agents, countries, ...
  • Block known bad IP with DNSBL and CrowdSec
  • Prevent bruteforce attacks with rate limiting
  • Detect bad files with ClamAV
  • Easy to configure with environment variables or web UI
  • Automatic configuration with container labels
  • Docker Swarm support

Fooling automated tools/scanners :

You can find a live demo at https://demo-nginx.bunkerity.com, feel free to do some security tests.

Table of contents

Click to show

Quickstart guide

Run HTTP server with default settings

docker run -p 80:8080 -v /path/to/web/files:/www:ro bunkerity/bunkerized-nginx

Web files are stored in the /www directory, the container will serve files from there. Please note that bunkerized-nginx doesn't run as root but as an unprivileged user with UID/GID 101 therefore you should set the rights of /path/to/web/files accordingly.

In combination with PHP

docker network create mynet
docker run --network mynet \
           -p 80:8080 \
           -v /path/to/web/files:/www:ro \
           -e REMOTE_PHP=myphp \
           -e REMOTE_PHP_PATH=/app \
           bunkerity/bunkerized-nginx
docker run --network mynet \
           --name myphp \
           -v /path/to/web/files:/app \
           php:fpm

The REMOTE_PHP environment variable lets you define the address of a remote PHP-FPM instance that will execute the .php files. REMOTE_PHP_PATH must be set to the directory where the PHP container will find the files.

Run HTTPS server with automated Let's Encrypt

docker run -p 80:8080 \
           -p 443:8443 \
           -v /path/to/web/files:/www:ro \
           -v /where/to/save/certificates:/etc/letsencrypt \
           -e SERVER_NAME=www.yourdomain.com \
           -e AUTO_LETS_ENCRYPT=yes \
           -e REDIRECT_HTTP_TO_HTTPS=yes \
           bunkerity/bunkerized-nginx

Certificates are stored in the /etc/letsencrypt directory, you should save it on your local drive. Please note that bunkerized-nginx doesn't run as root but as an unprivileged user with UID/GID 101 therefore you should set the rights of /where/to/save/certificates accordingly.

If you don't want your webserver to listen on HTTP add the environment variable LISTEN_HTTP with a no value (e.g. HTTPS only). But Let's Encrypt needs the port 80 to be opened so redirecting the port is mandatory.

Here you have three environment variables :

  • SERVER_NAME : define the FQDN of your webserver, this is mandatory for Let's Encrypt (www.yourdomain.com should point to your IP address)
  • AUTO_LETS_ENCRYPT : enable automatic Let's Encrypt creation and renewal of certificates
  • REDIRECT_HTTP_TO_HTTPS : enable HTTP to HTTPS redirection

As a reverse proxy

docker run -p 80:8080 \
           -e USE_REVERSE_PROXY=yes \
           -e REVERSE_PROXY_URL=/ \
           -e REVERSE_PROXY_HOST=http://myserver:8080 \
           bunkerity/bunkerized-nginx

This is a simple reverse proxy to a unique application. If you have more than one application you can add more REVERSE_PROXY_URL/REVERSE_PROXY_HOST by appending a suffix number like this :

docker run -p 80:8080 \
           -e USE_REVERSE_PROXY=yes \
           -e REVERSE_PROXY_URL_1=/app1/ \
           -e REVERSE_PROXY_HOST_1=http://myapp1:3000/ \
           -e REVERSE_PROXY_URL_2=/app2/ \
           -e REVERSE_PROXY_HOST_2=http://myapp2:3000/ \
           bunkerity/bunkerized-nginx

Behind a reverse proxy

docker run -p 80:8080 \
           -v /path/to/web/files:/www \
           -e PROXY_REAL_IP=yes \
           bunkerity/bunkerized-nginx

The PROXY_REAL_IP environment variable, when set to yes, activates the ngx_http_realip_module to get the real client IP from the reverse proxy.

See this section if you need to tweak some values (trusted ip/network, header, ...).

Multisite

By default, bunkerized-nginx will only create one server block. When setting the MULTISITE environment variable to yes, one server block will be created for each host defined in the SERVER_NAME environment variable.
You can set/override values for a specific server by prefixing the environment variable with one of the server name previously defined.

docker run -p 80:8080 \
           -p 443:8443 \
           -v /where/to/save/certificates:/etc/letsencrypt \
           -e SERVER_NAME=app1.domain.com app2.domain.com \
           -e MULTISITE=yes \
           -e AUTO_LETS_ENCRYPT=yes \
           -e REDIRECT_HTTP_TO_HTTPS=yes \
           -e USE_REVERSE_PROXY=yes \
           -e app1.domain.com_REVERSE_PROXY_URL=/ \
           -e app1.domain.com_REVERSE_PROXY_HOST=http://myapp1:8000 \
           -e app2.domain.com_REVERSE_PROXY_URL=/ \
           -e app2.domain.com_REVERSE_PROXY_HOST=http://myapp2:8000 \
           bunkerity/bunkerized-nginx

The USE_REVERSE_PROXY is a global variable that will be applied to each server block. Whereas the app1.domain.com_* and app2.domain.com_* will only be applied to the app1.domain.com and app2.domain.com server block respectively.

When serving files, the web root directory should contains subdirectories named as the servers defined in the SERVER_NAME environment variable. Here is an example :


docker run -p 80:8080 \
           -p 443:8443 \
           -v /where/to/save/certificates:/etc/letsencrypt \
           -v /where/are/web/files:/www:ro \
           -e SERVER_NAME=app1.domain.com app2.domain.com \
           -e MULTISITE=yes \
           -e AUTO_LETS_ENCRYPT=yes \
           -e REDIRECT_HTTP_TO_HTTPS=yes \
           -e app1.domain.com_REMOTE_PHP=php1 \
           -e app1.domain.com_REMOTE_PHP_PATH=/app \
           -e app2.domain.com_REMOTE_PHP=php2 \
           -e app2.domain.com_REMOTE_PHP_PATH=/app \
           bunkerity/bunkerized-nginx

The /where/are/web/files directory should have a structure like this :

/where/are/web/files
├── app1.domain.com
│   └── index.php
│   └── ...
└── app2.domain.com
    └── index.php
    └── ...

Automatic configuration

The downside of using environment variables is that you need to recreate a new container each time you want to add or remove a web service. An alternative is to use the bunkerized-nginx-autoconf image which listens for Docker events and "automagically" generates the configuration.

First we need a volume that will store the configurations :

docker volume create nginx_conf

Then we run bunkerized-nginx with the bunkerized-nginx.AUTOCONF label, mount the created volume at /etc/nginx and set some default configurations for our services (e.g. : automatic Let's Encrypt and HTTP to HTTPS redirect) :

docker network create mynet

docker run -p 80:8080 \
           -p 443:8443 \
           --network mynet \
           -v /where/to/save/certificates:/etc/letsencrypt \
           -v /where/are/web/files:/www:ro \
           -v nginx_conf:/etc/nginx \
           -e SERVER_NAME= \
           -e MULTISITE=yes \
           -e AUTO_LETS_ENCRYPT=yes \
           -e REDIRECT_HTTP_TO_HTTPS=yes \
           -l bunkerized.nginx.AUTOCONF \
           bunkerity/bunkerized-nginx

When setting SERVER_NAME to nothing bunkerized-nginx won't create any server block (in case we only want automatic configuration).

Once bunkerized-nginx is created, let's setup the autoconf container :

docker run -v /var/run/docker.sock:/var/run/docker.sock:ro \
           -v nginx_conf:/etc/nginx \
           bunkerity/bunkerized-nginx-autoconf

We can now create a new container and use labels to dynamically configure bunkerized-nginx. Labels for automatic configuration are the same as environment variables but with the "bunkerized-nginx." prefix.

Here is a PHP example :

docker run --network mynet \
           --name myapp \
           -v /where/are/web/files/app.domain.com:/app \
           -l bunkerized-nginx.SERVER_NAME=app.domain.com \
           -l bunkerized-nginx.REMOTE_PHP=myapp \
           -l bunkerized-nginx.REMOTE_PHP_PATH=/app \
           php:fpm

And a reverse proxy example :

docker run --network mynet \
           --name anotherapp \
           -l bunkerized-nginx.SERVER_NAME=app2.domain.com \
           -l bunkerized-nginx.USE_REVERSE_PROXY=yes \
           -l bunkerized-nginx.REVERSE_PROXY_URL=/ \
           -l bunkerized-nginx.REVERSE_PROXY_HOST=http://anotherapp \
           tutum/hello-world

Swarm mode

Automatic configuration through labels is also supported in swarm mode. The bunkerized-nginx-autoconf is used to listen for Swarm events (e.g. service create/rm) and "automagically" edit configurations files and reload nginx.

As a use case we will assume the following :

  • Some managers are also workers (they will only run the autoconf container for obvious security reasons)
  • The bunkerized-nginx service will be deployed on all workers (global mode) so clients can connect to each of them (e.g. load balancing, CDN, edge proxy, ...)
  • There is a shared folder mounted on managers and workers (e.g. NFS, GlusterFS, CephFS, ...)

Let's start by creating the network to allow communications between our services :

docker network create -d overlay mynet

We can now create the autoconf service that will listen to swarm events :

docker service create --name autoconf \
                      --network mynet \
                      --mount type=bind,source=/var/run/docker.sock,destination=/var/run/docker.sock,ro \
                      --mount type=bind,source=/shared/confs,destination=/etc/nginx \
                      --mount type=bind,source=/shared/letsencrypt,destination=/etc/letsencrypt \
                      --mount type=bind,source=/shared/acme-challenge,destination=/acme-challenge \
                      -e SWARM_MODE=yes \
                      -e API_URI=/ChangeMeToSomethingHardToGuess \
                      --replicas 1 \
                      --constraint node.role==manager \
                      bunkerity/bunkerized-nginx-autoconf

You need to change API_URI to something hard to guess since there is no other security mechanism to protect the API at the moment.

When autoconf is created, it's time for the bunkerized-nginx service to be up :

docker service create --name nginx \
                      --network mynet \
                      -p published=80,target=8080,mode=host \
                      -p published=443,target=8443,mode=host \
                      --mount type=bind,source=/shared/confs,destination=/etc/nginx \
                      --mount type=bind,source=/shared/letsencrypt,destination=/etc/letsencrypt,ro \
                      --mount type=bind,source=/shared/acme-challenge,destination=/acme-challenge,ro \
                      --mount type=bind,source=/shared/www,destination=/www,ro \
                      -e SWARM_MODE=yes \
                      -e USE_API=yes \
                      -e API_URI=/ChangeMeToSomethingHardToGuess \
                      -e MULTISITE=yes \
                      -e SERVER_NAME= \
                      -e AUTO_LETS_ENCRYPT=yes \
                      -e REDIRECT_HTTP_TO_HTTPS=yes \
                      -l bunkerized-nginx.AUTOCONF \
                      --mode global \
                      --constraint node.role==worker \
                      bunkerity/bunkerized-nginx

The API_URI value must be the same as the one specified for the autoconf service.

We can now create a new service and use labels to dynamically configure bunkerized-nginx. Labels for automatic configuration are the same as environment variables but with the "bunkerized-nginx." prefix.

Here is a PHP example :

docker service create --name myapp \
                      --network mynet \
                      --mount type=bind,source=/shared/www/app.domain.com,destination=/app \
                      -l bunkerized-nginx.SERVER_NAME=app.domain.com \
                      -l bunkerized-nginx.REMOTE_PHP=myapp \
                      -l bunkerized-nginx.REMOTE_PHP_PATH=/app \
                      --constraint node.role==worker \
                      php:fpm

And a reverse proxy example :

docker service create --name anotherapp \
                      --network mynet \
                      -l bunkerized-nginx.SERVER_NAME=app2.domain.com \
                      -l bunkerized-nginx.USE_REVERSE_PROXY=yes \
                      -l bunkerized-nginx.REVERSE_PROXY_URL=/ \
                      -l bunkerized-nginx.REVERSE_PROXY_HOST=http://anotherapp \
                      --constraint node.role==worker \
                      tutum/hello-world

Web UI

This feature exposes, for now, a security risk because you need to mount the docker socket inside a container exposing a web application. You can test it but you should not use it in servers facing the internet.

A dedicated image, bunkerized-nginx-ui, lets you manage bunkerized-nginx instances and services configurations through a web user interface. This feature is still in beta, feel free to open a new issue if you find a bug and/or you have an idea to improve it.

First we need a volume that will store the configurations :

docker volume create nginx_conf

Then, we can create the bunkerized-nginx instance with the bunkerized-nginx.UI label and a reverse proxy configuration for our web UI :

docker network create mynet

docker run -p 80:8080 \
           -p 443:8443 \
           --network mynet \
           -v nginx_conf:/etc/nginx \
           -v /where/are/web/files:/www:ro \
           -v /where/to/save/certificates:/etc/letsencrypt \
           -e SERVER_NAME=admin.domain.com \
           -e MULTISITE=yes \
           -e AUTO_LETS_ENCRYPT=yes \
           -e REDIRECT_HTTP_TO_HTTPS=yes \
           -e DISABLE_DEFAULT_SERVER=yes \
           -e admin.domain.com_SERVE_FILES=no \
           -e admin.domain.com_USE_AUTH_BASIC=yes \
           -e admin.domain.com_AUTH_BASIC_USER=admin \
           -e admin.domain.com_AUTH_BASIC_PASSWORD=password \
           -e admin.domain.com_USE_REVERSE_PROXY=yes \
           -e admin.domain.com_REVERSE_PROXY_URL=/webui/ \
           -e admin.domain.com_REVERSE_PROXY_HOST=http://myui:5000/ \
           -l bunkerized-nginx.UI \
           bunkerity/bunkerized-nginx

The AUTH_BASIC environment variables let you define a login/password that must be provided before accessing to the web UI. At the moment, there is no authentication mechanism integrated into bunkerized-nginx-ui.

We can now create the bunkerized-nginx-ui container that will host the web UI behind bunkerized-nginx :

docker run --network mynet \
           -v /var/run/docker.sock:/var/run/docker.sock:ro \
           -v nginx_conf:/etc/nginx \
           -e ABSOLUTE_URI=https://admin.domain.com/webui/ \
           bunkerity/bunkerized-nginx-ui

After that, the web UI should be accessible from https://admin.domain.com/webui/.

Security tuning

bunkerized-nginx comes with a set of predefined security settings that you can (and you should) tune to meet your own use case. We recommend you to read the security tuning section of the documentation.

Going further