When you visit http://lemmy.world it should redirect to https://lemmy.world - at least the login page should be secure.
Yes that’s on my to do list. I’ll do that today.
Don’t all modern browsers try https by default?
(Not that I disagree.)
Every time I set up FF on a new install I have to choose always on https
Hmm , when I replace this:
http { server { listen 80; server_name lemmy.world; location / { proxy_pass http://lemmy-ui:1234; proxy_set_header Host $host; } }
with this:
http { server { listen 80; server_name lemmy.world; location / { return 301 https://$host$request_uri; } }
it breaks, gives 502 when visiting the site…
ideas? (I’m not that much into nginx…)
You could try this
this config snippet is assuming thet you’ve already got the TLS cert/pem file for lemmy.world elsewhere in your nginx.config
http { server { listen 80; listen 443 ssl; server_name lemmy.world; if ($scheme = "http") { return 307 https://$host$request_uri; } location / { proxy_pass http://lemmy-ui:1234; proxy_set_header Host $host; } }
If you get redirected to lemmy.world:1234, then add
absolute_redirect off;
in the ‘server’ blockLast thing - 307 is a temporary redirect, you might to change it to a permanent one once you’ve confirmed it’s working as intended
Cool, thanks! I’ll try that.
Can we get an error log? If no, are you seeing any timeouts in there?
You might want to add the secure port (:443) in your redirect. Otherwise it might be trying to load https on port 80 still, which can’t work.
- http: port 80
- https: port 443
Notes:
- just a guess. I haven’t looked at an nginx config in a while
- make sure to try on multiple browsers as they all don’t behave the same way
This piece I’ve pasted above isn’t the whole nginx.conf, there’s also a large block for the 443 traffic. It’s just the http traffic that I need to redirect to 443.
Ok. Now that I think about it, you shouldn’t have to specify the port.
deleted by creator
I’ve been on the secure version by default so far myself.
Yes most browsers automatically do, but some don’t…
Oooh I thought it was a backend thing, cause my NGINX has a force SSL option. I guess it can be done from either end.
I think I now fixed it
@ruud@lemmy.world Let me see if I can reply from Mastodon
Ooh it worked!