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Caddyfile.md
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Caddyfile.md
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The Caddyfile is how you configure Caddy. Generally you have one Caddyfile per website.
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By default, Caddy will look for the Caddyfile in the current directory, but you can specify any other path when you launch Caddy:
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```
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$ caddy -conf=/path/to/Caddyfile
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```
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And when you do that, the Caddyfile can have any filename, but we will call it the Caddyfile in the docs.
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## Structure
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The Caddyfile is very easy to use. It can configure either one or multiple servers (virtual hosts).
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The first line is always an address to listen on:
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```
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mydomain.com:80
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```
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The rest of the file consists of lines with directives and parameters (arguments), for example:
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```
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mydomain.com:80
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gzip
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ext .html
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```
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To configure multiple servers (virtual hosts) in the same Caddyfile, wrap the directives pertaining for each server in a curly brace block, for example:
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```
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mydomain.com:80 {
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redirect / :443 301
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}
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# Curly braces must open at the end of a line
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mydomain.com:443 {
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gzip
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ext .html .htm
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tls cert.pem key.pem
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}
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```
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Notice that a `#` token turns the rest of the line into a comment.
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In the above file, the keywords `redirect`, `gzip`, `ext`, and `tls` are directives. There are others. Each directive is bound to a unique piece of middleware that wraps every request in order to satisfy the Caddyfile.
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To learn about what directives are available, please see the list of directives in this wiki.
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As you can tell, whitespace separates different arguments/parameters. You can group multiple words into a single argument by enclosing it "in quotes".
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