Heads up! Long post and lots of head bashing against the wall.
Context:
I have a written an a python app (Django). I have dockerized the deployment and the compose file has three containers, app, nginx and postgres. I’m currently trying to deploy a demo of it in a VPS running Debian 11. Information below has been redacted (IPs, Domain name, etc.)
Problem:
I keep running into 502 errors. Locally things work very well even with nginx (but running on 80). As I try to deploy this I’m trying to configure nginx the best I can and redirecting http traffic to https and ssl certs. The nginx logs simply say “connect() failed (111: Connection refused) while connecting to upstream, client: 1.2.3.4, server: demo.example.com, request: “GET / HTTP/1.1”, upstream: “http://192.168.0.2:8020/”, host: “demo.example.com””. I have tried just about everything.
What I’ve tried:
How can you help:
Please take a look at the nginx.conf config below and see if you guys can spot a problem, PLEASE! This is my current /etc/nginx/nginx.conf
`
user www-data;
worker_processes auto;
error_log /var/log/nginx/error.log notice; pid /var/run/nginx.pid;
events { worker_connections 1024; }
http { include /etc/nginx/mime.types; default_type application/octet-stream;
log_format main '$remote_addr - $remote_user [$time_local] "$request" '
'$status $body_bytes_sent "$http_referer" '
'"$http_user_agent" "$http_x_forwarded_for"';
access_log /var/log/nginx/access.log main;
sendfile on;
#tcp_nopush on;
keepalive_timeout 65;
#gzip on;
upstream djangoapp {
server app:8020;
}
server {
listen 80;
listen [::]:80;
server_name demo.example.com;
return 301 https://$host$request_uri;
}
server {
listen 443 ssl;
listen [::]:443 ssl;
server_name demo.example.com;
ssl_certificate /etc/letsencrypt/live/demo.example.com/fullchain.pem;
ssl_certificate_key /etc/letsencrypt/live/demo.example.com/privkey.pem;
#ssl_protocols TLSv1.2 TLSv1.3;
#ssl_prefer_server_ciphers on;
location / {
proxy_pass http://djangoapp;
proxy_set_header Host $host;
proxy_set_header X-Real-IP $remote_addr;
proxy_set_header X-Forwarded-Proto $scheme;
proxy_set_header X-Forwarded-For $proxy_add_x_forwarded_for;
#proxy_set_header Upgrade $http_upgrade;
#proxy_set_header Connection keep-alive;
proxy_redirect off;
}
location /static/ {
autoindex on;
alias /static/;
}
}
}
`
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While not directly solving the problem, my usual setup involves installing webmin with nginx and managing my domains and nginx from there, changing the auto-generated domain configs to proxy to docker. I have yet to find an easier solution.
My biggest gripe with it is that it sets up a few things I don’t need, like PHP, disk quotas, etc.