# systemd Service Unit for Caddy Please do not hesitate to ask on [caddyserver/support](https://gitter.im/caddyserver/support) if you have any questions. Feel free to prepend to your question the username of whoever touched the file most recently, for example `@wmark re systemd: …`. The provided file should work with systemd version 219 or later. It might work with earlier versions. The easiest way to check your systemd version is to run `systemctl --version`. ## Instructions We will assume the following: * that you want to run caddy as user `www-data` and group `www-data`, with UID and GID 33 * you are working from a non-root user account that can use 'sudo' to execute commands as root Adjust as necessary or according to your preferences. First, put the caddy binary in the system wide binary directory and give it appropriate ownership and permissions: ```bash sudo cp /path/to/caddy /usr/local/bin sudo chown root:root /usr/local/bin/caddy sudo chmod 755 /usr/local/bin/caddy ``` Give the caddy binary the ability to bind to privileged ports (e.g. 80, 443) as a non-root user: ```bash sudo setcap 'cap_net_bind_service=+ep' /usr/local/bin/caddy ``` Set up the user, group, and directories that will be needed: ```bash sudo groupadd -g 33 www-data sudo useradd \ -g www-data --no-user-group \ --home-dir /var/www --no-create-home \ --shell /usr/sbin/nologin \ --system --uid 33 www-data sudo mkdir /etc/caddy sudo chown -R root:root /etc/caddy sudo mkdir /etc/ssl/caddy sudo chown -R root:www-data /etc/ssl/caddy sudo chmod 0770 /etc/ssl/caddy ``` Place your caddy configuration file ("Caddyfile") in the proper directory and give it appropriate ownership and permissions: ```bash sudo cp /path/to/Caddyfile /etc/caddy/ sudo chown root:root /etc/caddy/Caddyfile sudo chmod 644 /etc/caddy/Caddyfile ``` Create the home directory for the server and give it appropriate ownership and permissions: ```bash sudo mkdir /var/www sudo chown www-data:www-data /var/www sudo chmod 555 /var/www ``` Let's assume you have the contents of your website in a directory called 'example.com'. Put your website into place for it to be served by caddy: ```bash sudo cp -R example.com /var/www/ sudo chown -R www-data:www-data /var/www/example.com sudo chmod -R 555 /var/www/example.com ``` You'll need to explicitly configure caddy to serve the site from this location by adding the following to your Caddyfile if you haven't already: ``` example.com { root /var/www/example.com ... } ``` Install the systemd service unit configuration file, reload the systemd daemon, and start caddy: ```bash wget https://raw.githubusercontent.com/mholt/caddy/master/dist/init/linux-systemd/caddy.service sudo cp caddy.service /etc/systemd/system/ sudo chown root:root /etc/systemd/system/caddy.service sudo chmod 644 /etc/systemd/system/caddy.service sudo systemctl daemon-reload sudo systemctl start caddy.service ``` Have the caddy service start automatically on boot if you like: ```bash sudo systemctl enable caddy.service ``` If caddy doesn't seem to start properly you can view the log data to help figure out what the problem is: ```bash journalctl --boot -u caddy.service ``` Use `log stdout` and `errors stderr` in your Caddyfile to fully utilize systemd journaling. If your GNU/Linux distribution does not use *journald* with *systemd* then check any logfiles in `/var/log`. If you want to follow the latest logs from caddy you can do so like this: ```bash journalctl -f -u caddy.service ``` You can make other certificates and private key files accessible to the `www-data` user with the following command: ```bash setfacl -m user:www-data:r-- /etc/ssl/private/my.key ```