Deploying Portainer behind nginx reverse proxy

Deploying in a Docker Standalone scenario

To deploy Portainer behind an nginx proxy in a Docker standalone scenario you must use a Docker Compose file. In the following docker-compose.yml you will find the configuration of the nginx proxy and the Portainer Server.

This example uses the excellent nginxproxy/nginx-proxy image as the proxy container, which requires no additional configuration beyond the two environment variables added to the portainer container's definition.

version: "2"

services:
  nginx-proxy:
    image: nginxproxy/nginx-proxy
    restart: always
    ports:
      - "80:80"
    volumes:
      - "/var/run/docker.sock:/tmp/docker.sock:ro"

  portainer:
    image: portainer/portainer-ee:latest
    command: -H unix:///var/run/docker.sock
    restart: always
    environment:
      - VIRTUAL_HOST=portainer.yourdomain.com
      - VIRTUAL_PORT=9000
    ports:
      - 8000:8000
    volumes:
      - /var/run/docker.sock:/var/run/docker.sock
      - portainer_data:/data

volumes:
  portainer_data:

To start working with this recipe, change the VIRTUAL_HOST value then deploy Portainer by running the following:

docker-compose up -d

When this has finished, run docker ps . You should see an output similar to this:

CONTAINER ID   IMAGE                           COMMAND                  CREATED         STATUS         PORTS                                                           NAMES
8c8f2eac7c9a   portainer/portainer-ee:latest   "/portainer -H unix:…"   4 minutes ago   Up 4 minutes   9000/tcp, 0.0.0.0:8000->8000/tcp, :::8000->8000/tcp, 9443/tcp   portainer_portainer_1
3e7c8b5d71d7   nginxproxy/nginx-proxy          "/app/docker-entrypo…"   4 minutes ago   Up 4 minutes   0.0.0.0:80->80/tcp, :::80->80/tcp                               portainer_nginx-proxy_1

Once the deployment has finished you can browse portainer.yourdomain.com.

Deploying in a Docker Swarm scenario

Deploying Portainer in Docker Swarm behind nginx has similar steps to the Docker Standalone scenario. Before deploying, you need to create two elements: networks and volumes.

This deployment assumes you are running one manager node. If you are using multiple managers we advise reading this knowledge base article before proceeding.

First, create two networks:

  • One for the agent and the communication with the Portainer Server.

  • One to 'expose' the Portainer container to the same network as the reverse proxy.

 docker network create -d overlay proxy
 docker network create -d agent_network

Next, create the volume:

 docker volume create portainer_data

And finally, save the following recipe as portainer.yml:

version: '3.2'

services:
  nginx-proxy:
    image: nginxproxy/nginx-proxy
    networks:
      - proxy
    ports:
      - "80:80"
    volumes:
      - "/var/run/docker.sock:/tmp/docker.sock:ro"
      - "./vhost.d:/etc/nginx/vhost.d:ro"

  agent:
    image: portainer/agent:latest
    environment:
      # REQUIRED: Should be equal to the service name prefixed by "tasks." when
      # deployed inside an overlay network
      AGENT_CLUSTER_ADDR: tasks.agent
      # AGENT_PORT: 9001
      # LOG_LEVEL: debug
    volumes:
      - /var/run/docker.sock:/var/run/docker.sock
      - /var/lib/docker/volumes:/var/lib/docker/volumes
    networks:
      - agent_network
    deploy:
      mode: global
      placement:
        constraints: [node.platform.os == linux]

  portainer:
    image: portainer/portainer-ee:latest
    command: -H tcp://tasks.agent:9001 --tlsskipverify
    volumes:
      - data:/data
    environment:
      - VIRTUAL_HOST=portainer.yourdomain.com
      - VIRTUAL_PORT=9000
    ports:
      - 8000:8000
    networks:
      - proxy
      - agent_network
    deploy:
      mode: replicated
      replicas: 1
      placement:
        constraints: [node.role == manager]


networks:
  proxy:
    external: true
  agent_network:
    external: true

volumes:
   data:

To start working with this recipe, change the VIRTUAL_HOST value then deploy Portainer by running the following:

 docker stack deploy portainer -c portainer.yml

To check the deployment, run docker service ls. You should see an output similar to the following:

ID                  NAME                    MODE                REPLICAS            IMAGE                          PORTS
gy2bjxid0g4p        portainer_agent         global              1/1                 portainer/agent:latest
jwvjp5bux4sz        portainer_nginx-proxy   replicated          1/1                 nginxproxy/nginx-proxy:latest  *:80->80/tcp
5nflcvoxl3c7        portainer_portainer     replicated          1/1                 portainer/portainer-ee:latest  *:8000->8000/tcp

Once the services are running, you will be able to access Portainer from the URL you defined earlier, for example: portainer.yourdomain.com.

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