* [docs] Add a certificates guide in Advanced This adds some documentation about the process of getting certificates through ACME in general. It also provides a number of links to alternative clients and certbot deployment guides that are up to date. Slightly restructure the NGINX and Apache reverse proxy documentation and insert mentions to the Provisioning TLS certificates advanced documentation in them. * [docs] Add firewall section in Advanced * [docs] Add new guides to section indexes * [docs] Fix spelling issue * [docs] Fix a few typos
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Apache HTTP Server
In order to use Apache as a reverse proxy for GoToSocial you'll need to have it installed on your server. If you intend for the Apache instance to also handle TLS, you'll need to provision TLS certificates too.
Apache is packaged for many distributions. It's very likely you can install it with your distribution's package manager. You can also run Apache using a container runtime with the official Apache image that's published to the Docker Hub.
In this guide we'll also show how to use certbot to provision the TLS certificates. It too is packaged in many distributions but many distributions tend to ship fairly old versions of certbot. If you run into trouble it may be worth considering using the container image instead.
Configure GoToSocial
We're going to have Apache handle LetsEncrypt certificates, so you need to turn off built-in LetsEncrypt support in your GoToSocial config.
First open the file in your text editor:
sudoedit /gotosocial/config.yaml
Then set letsencrypt-enabled: false
.
If the reverse proxy will be running on the same machine, set the bind-address
to "localhost"
so that the GoToSocial server is only accessible via loopback. Otherwise it may be possible to bypass your proxy by connecting to GoToSocial directly, which might be undesirable.
If GoToSocial is already running, restart it.
sudo systemctl restart gotosocial.service
Or if you don't have a systemd service just restart it manually.
Set up Apache
Required Apache modules
You need to ensure you have a number of Apache modules installed and enabled. All these modules should ship with your distribution's Apache package, but they may have been split out into separate packages.
You can check which modules you have installed with apachectl -M
.
You'll need to have the following modules loaded:
proxy_http
to proxy HTTP requests to GoToSocialssl
to handle SSL/TLSheaders
to manipulate HTTP request and response headersrewrite
to rewrite HTTP requestsmd
for Lets Encrypt, available since 2.4.30
On Debian, Ubuntu and openSUSE, you can use the a2enmod
utility to load any additional modules. For the Red Hat/CentOS family of distributions, you'll need to add a LoadModule
directive to your Apache configuration instead.
TLS with mod_md
!!! note
mod_md
is only available since Apache 2.4.30 and still considered experimental. It works well enough in practice and is the most convenient method.
Now we'll configure Apache HTTP Server to serve GoToSocial requests.
First we'll write a configuration for Apache HTTP Server and put it in /etc/apache2/sites-available
:
sudo mkdir -p /etc/apache2/sites-available/
sudoedit /etc/apache2/sites-available/example.com.conf
In the above sudoedit
command, replace example.com
with the hostname of your GoToSocial server.
The file you're about to create should look a bit like this:
MDomain example.com auto
MDCertificateAgreement accepted
<VirtualHost *:80 >
ServerName example.com
</VirtualHost>
<VirtualHost *:443>
ServerName example.com
RewriteEngine On
RewriteCond %{HTTP:Upgrade} websocket [NC]
RewriteCond %{HTTP:Connection} upgrade [NC]
# set to 127.0.0.1 instead of localhost to work around https://stackoverflow.com/a/52550758
RewriteRule ^/?(.*) "ws://127.0.0.1:8080/$1" [P,L]
SSLEngine On
ProxyPreserveHost On
# set to 127.0.0.1 instead of localhost to work around https://stackoverflow.com/a/52550758
ProxyPass / http://127.0.0.1:8080/
ProxyPassReverse / http://127.0.0.1:8080/
RequestHeader set "X-Forwarded-Proto" expr=https
</VirtualHost>
or, if you have Apache httpd 2.4.47+, you can get rid of both mod_rewrite
and mod_proxy_wstunnel
and simplify the whole config to:
MDomain example.com auto
MDCertificateAgreement accepted
<VirtualHost *:80 >
ServerName example.com
</VirtualHost>
<VirtualHost *:443>
ServerName example.com
SSLEngine On
ProxyPreserveHost On
# set to 127.0.0.1 instead of localhost to work around https://stackoverflow.com/a/52550758
ProxyPass / http://127.0.0.1:8080/ upgrade=websocket
ProxyPassReverse / http://127.0.0.1:8080/
RequestHeader set "X-Forwarded-Proto" expr=https
</VirtualHost>
Again, replace occurrences of example.com
in the above config file with the hostname of your GtS server. If your domain name is gotosocial.example.com
, then gotosocial.example.com
would be the correct value.
You should also change http://127.0.0.1:8080
to the correct address and port (if it's not on 127.0.0.1:8080
) of your GtS server. For example, if you're running GoToSocial on another machine with the local ip of 192.168.178.69
and on port 8080
then http://192.168.178.69:8080/
would be the correct value.
Rewrite*
directives are needed to ensure that Websocket streaming connections also work. See the websocket document for more information on this.
ProxyPreserveHost On
is essential: It guarantees that the proxy and the GoToSocial speak of the same Server name. If not, GoToSocial will build the wrong authentication headers, and all attempts at federation will be rejected with 401 Unauthorized.
By default, apache sets X-Forwarded-For
in forwarded requests. To make this and rate limiting work, set the trusted-proxies
configuration variable. See the rate limiting and general configuration docs
Save and close the config file.
Now we'll need to link the file we just created to the folder that Apache HTTP Server reads configurations for active sites from.
sudo mkdir /etc/apache2/sites-enabled
sudo ln -s /etc/apache2/sites-available/example.com.conf /etc/apache2/sites-enabled/
In the above ln
command, replace example.com
with the hostname of your GoToSocial server.
Now check for configuration errors.
sudo apachectl -t
If everything is fine you should get this as output:
Syntax OK
Everything working? Great! Then restart Apache HTTP Server to load your new config file.
sudo systemctl restart apache2
Now, monitor the logs to see when the new LetsEncrypt certificate arrives (tail -F /var/log/apache2/error.log
), and then reload Apache one last time with the above systemctl restart
command. After that you should be good to go!
Apache HTTP Server needs to be restart (or reloaded), every time mod_md
gets a new certificate; see the module's docs for more information.
Depending on your version of Apache HTTP Server, you may see the following error: error (specific information not available): acme problem urn:ietf:params:acme:error:invalidEmail: Error creating new account :: contact email "webmaster@localhost" has invalid domain : Domain name needs at least one dot
If this happens, you'll need to do one (or all) of the below:
- Update
/etc/apache2/sites-enabled/000-default.conf
and change theServerAdmin
value to a valid email address (then reload Apache HTTP Server). - Add the line
MDContactEmail your.email.address@whatever.com
below theMDomain
line in/etc/apache2/sites-available/example.com.conf
, replacingyour.email.address@whatever.com
with a valid email address, andexample.com
with your GtS host name.
TLS with externally managed certificates
!!! note We have additional documentation on how to provision TLS certificates that also provides links to additional content and tutorials for different distributions that may be good to review.
If you prefer to have a manual setup or setting SSL using a different service to manage it (Certbot, etc), then you can use a simpler setup for your Apache HTTP Server.
First we'll write a configuration for Apache HTTP Server and put it in /etc/apache2/sites-available
:
sudo mkdir -p /etc/apache2/sites-available/
sudoedit /etc/apache2/sites-available/example.com.conf
In the above sudoedit
command, replace example.com
with the hostname of your GoToSocial server.
The file you're about to create should look initially for both 80 (required) and 443 ports (optional) a bit like this:
<VirtualHost *:80>
ServerName example.com
RewriteEngine On
RewriteCond %{HTTP:Upgrade} websocket [NC]
RewriteCond %{HTTP:Connection} upgrade [NC]
# set to 127.0.0.1 instead of localhost to work around https://stackoverflow.com/a/52550758
RewriteRule ^/?(.*) "ws://127.0.0.1:8080/$1" [P,L]
ProxyPreserveHost On
# set to 127.0.0.1 instead of localhost to work around https://stackoverflow.com/a/52550758
ProxyPass / http://127.0.0.1:8080/
ProxyPassReverse / http://127.0.0.1:8080/
</VirtualHost>
Again, replace occurrences of example.com
in the above config file with the hostname of your GtS server. If your domain name is gotosocial.example.com
, then gotosocial.example.com
would be the correct value.
You should also change http://127.0.0.1:8080
to the correct address and port (if it's not on 127.0.0.1:8080
) of your GtS server. For example, if you're running GoToSocial on another machine with the local ip of 192.168.178.69
and on port 8080
then http://192.168.178.69:8080/
would be the correct value.
Rewrite*
directives are needed to ensure that Websocket streaming connections also work. See the websocket document for more information on this.
ProxyPreserveHost On
is essential: It guarantees that the proxy and the GoToSocial speak of the same Server name. If not, GoToSocial will build the wrong authentication headers, and all attempts at federation will be rejected with 401 Unauthorized.
In the case of providing an initial setup for the 443 port looking for additional managing by an external tool, you could use default certificates provided by the server which you can find referenced in the default-ssl.conf
file at /etc/apache2/sites-available/
.
Save and close the config file.
Now we'll need to link the file we just created to the folder that Apache HTTP Server reads configurations for active sites from.
sudo mkdir /etc/apache2/sites-enabled
sudo ln -s /etc/apache2/sites-available/example.com.conf /etc/apache2/sites-enabled/
In the above ln
command, replace example.com
with the hostname of your GoToSocial server.
Now check for configuration errors.
sudo apachectl -t
If everything is fine you should get this as output:
Syntax OK
Everything working? Great! Then restart Apache HTTP Server to load your new config file.
sudo systemctl restart apache2
Troubleshooting
If you cannot connect to the site in your browser, the reverse proxy setup doesn't work. Compare the Apache log file (tail -F /var/log/apache2/access.log
) with the GoToSocial log file. Requests made must show up in both places. Double check the ProxyPass
setting.
If you can connect but your posts don't federate and your account cannot be found from elsewhere, check your logs. Federation is broken if you see messages attempting to read your profile (something like level=INFO … method=GET statusCode=401 path=/users/your_username msg="Unauthorized: …"
) or post to your inbox (something like level=INFO … method=POST statusCode=404 path=/your_username/inbox msg="Not Found: …"
). Double check the ProxyPreserveHost
setting.
If you can connect but you cannot authorize your account in a Mastodon client app, check your headers. Use curl -I https://example.com
and look for the Content-Security-Policy
header. If your webserver sets it, you might have to unset it. One way to do that is to use Header unset Content-Security-Policy
in the Apache site config file (something like example.com.conf
).