cross-posted from: https://programming.dev/post/39212874
I recently migrated my services from rootful
docker
to rootlesspodman quadlets
. It went smoothly, since nothing I use actually needs to be rootful. Well, except forcaddy
. It needs to be able to attach to privileged ports 80 and 443.My current way to bypass it is using
HAProxy
running as root and forwarding connections using proxy protocol. (Tried to usefirewalld
but that makes the client IP opaque tocaddy
.) But that adds an extra layer, which means extra latency. It’s perfectly usable, but I’d like to get rid of it, if possible.I’m willing to run
caddy
in rootfulpodman
if needed. But from what I understand, that means I can’t have it in the same rootless network as my other containers. I really don’t wanna open most of my containers’ ports, so that’s not an option.So, I’m asking whether any of these three things are possible.
- Use
firewalld
to forward ports tocaddy
without obscuring the client’s IP.- Make rootful
caddy
share a network with other rootless containers.- Assign privileged ports to caddy somehow, in rootless mode. (I know there’s a way to make all these ports unprivileged, but is it possible to only assign these 2 ports as unprivileged?)
Or maybe there’s a fourth way that I’m missing. I feel like this is a common enough setup, that there must be a way to do it. Any pointers are appreciated, thanks.
@SinTan1729 Thank you, now I can better understand why you want to avoid to open the privileged ports for non-root users which makes sense for your scenario.
I’m in the easy situation, that I don’t have to think about such a scenario, because my selfhosting system is exclusive for me.
I don’t know the exact agreement with your friends, but to avoid security issues I personally would use following way:
- deny usage of all ports by firewall
- allow only necessary ports by firewall
- enable privileged ports by sysctl
So it reduces additional layers and complexity.
If one of your friends would provide a service on a specific port it has to be discussed with you.
And if this is a privileged port, it is also possible.
Or you can handle e.g. a web request with a rule in caddy.