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Adding more wording to local description to clarify it relates to having "no domain" and other keywords/phrases users must be missing, because so many people are confused about this. Signed-off-by: sunjam <sunjam@users.noreply.github.com> Signed-off-by: Simon L. <szaimen@e.mail.de> Co-authored-by: Simon L. <szaimen@e.mail.de>
31 lines
2.9 KiB
Markdown
31 lines
2.9 KiB
Markdown
# Local instance
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It is possible due to several reasons that you do not want or cannot open Nextcloud to the public internet. Perhaps you were hoping to access AIO directly from an `ip.add.r.ess` (unsupported) or without a valid domain. However, AIO requires a valid certificate to work correctly. Below is discussed how you can achieve both: Having a valid certificate for Nextcloud and only using it locally.
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### Content
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- [1. The recommended way](#1-the-recommended-way)
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- [2. Use the ACME DNS-challenge](#2-use-the-acme-dns-challenge)
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- [3. Use Cloudflare](#3-use-cloudflare)
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- [4. Buy a certificate and use that](#4-buy-a-certificate-and-use-that)
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- [5. Tailscale network](#5-tailscale-network)
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## 1. The recommended way
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The recommended way is the following:
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1. Set up your domain correctly to point to your home network
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1. Set up a reverse proxy by following the [reverse proxy documentation](./reverse-proxy.md) but only open port 80 (which is needed for the ACME challenge to work - however no real traffic will use this port).
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1. Set up a local DNS-server like a pi-hole and configure it to be your local DNS-server for the whole network. Then in the Pi-hole interface, add a custom DNS-record for your domain and overwrite the A-record (and possibly the AAAA-record, too) to point to the private ip-address of your reverse proxy (see https://github.com/nextcloud/all-in-one#how-can-i-access-nextcloud-locally)
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1. Enter the ip-address of your local dns-server in the daemon.json file for docker so that you are sure that all docker containers use the correct local dns-server.
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1. Now, entering the domain in the AIO-interface should work as expected and should allow you to continue with the setup
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**Hint:** You may have a look at [this video](https://youtu.be/zk-y2wVkY4c) for a more complete but possibly outdated example.
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## 2. Use the ACME DNS-challenge
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You can alternatively use the ACME DNS-challenge to get a valid certificate for Nextcloud. Here is described how to set it up: https://github.com/nextcloud/all-in-one#how-to-get-nextcloud-running-using-the-acme-dns-challenge
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## 3. Use Cloudflare
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If you do not have any control over the network, you may think about using Cloudflare Tunnel to get a valid certificate for your Nextcloud. However it will be opened to the public internet then. See https://github.com/nextcloud/all-in-one#how-to-run-nextcloud-behind-a-cloudflare-tunnel how to set this up.
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## 4. Buy a certificate and use that
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If none of the above ways work for you, you may simply buy a certificate from an issuer for your domain. You then download the certificate onto your server, configure AIO in [reverse proxy mode](./reverse-proxy.md) and use the certificate for your domain in your reverse proxy config.
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## 5. Tailscale network
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For a reverse proxy example guide for Tailscale, see this guide by @flll: https://github.com/nextcloud/all-in-one/discussions/5439
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