I’m hoping someone can help me figure out what I’m doing wrong.
I have a VM on my local network that has Traefik, 2 apps (whomai and myapp), and wireguard in server mode (let’s call this VM “server”). I have another VM on the same network with Traefik and wireguard in client mode (let’s call this VM “client”).
- both VMs can can ping each other using their VPN IP addresses
- wireguard successfully handshakes
- I have
myapp.mydomain.com
as a host override on my router so every computer in my house points it to “client” - when I run
curl -L --header 'Host: myapp.mydomain.com'
from the myapp container it successfully returns the myapp page.
But when I browse to http://myapp.mydomain.com
I get “Internal Server Error”, yet nothing appears in the docker logs for any app (neither traefik container, neither wireguard container, nor the myapp container).
Any suggestions/assistance would be appreciated!
This seems like an issue where the wireguard is not using the correct DNS server. Does the wireguard DNS setting point to the router?
A diagrams might help me to see what is going on more clearly.
Thanks for helping, @[email protected].
Both wireguard containers are using my router for DNS, and my router points
myapp.mydomain.com
andwhoami.mydomain.com
to “client”.
You’ll have to give more details. Where are you browsing from? How is the tunnel between the VMs relevant? Are the VMs’ IPs routed on the LAN? Is
myapp.mydomain.com
defined in a DNS server, and if so which? Is it the DNS server on the LAN or a public DNS? Do both VM and the machine you’re browsing from resolve that address to the same IP, and is that IP reachable from the browser machine?Thanks for helping, @[email protected].
I’m browsing from my laptop on the same network as promox: 192.168.1.0/24
The tunnel is relevant in that my ultimate goal will be to have “client” in the cloud so I can access my apps from the world while having all traffic into my house be through a VPN.
The VM’s IPs are 192.168.1.50 (“server”) and 192.168.1.51 (“client”). They can see everything on their subnet and everything on their subnet can see them.
Everything is using my router for DNS, and my router points
myapp.mydomain.com
andwhoami.mydomain.com
to “client”. And by “everything” I mean all computers on the subnet and all containers in this project.Both VMs and my laptop resolve
myapp.mydomain.com
andwhoami.mydomain.com
to 192.168.1.51, which is “client”, and can ping it.Is the browser also using the LAN router for DNS? Some browsers are set to use DoT or DoH for DNS, which would mean they’d bypass your router DNS.
Do you also get “Internal Server Error” if you make the request with curl on the CLI on the laptop?
How did you check that mydomain is being resolved correctly on the laptop?
What do you get with curl from the other VM, or from the router, or from the host machine of the VM?
Thanks so much for helping me troubleshoot this, @[email protected]!
Is the browser also using the LAN router for DNS? Some browsers are set to use DoT or DoH for DNS, which would mean they’d bypass your router DNS.
My browser was using DoH, but I turned it off and still have the same issue.
Do you also get “Internal Server Error” if you make the request with curl on the CLI on the laptop?
Yes, running
curl -L -k --header 'Host: whoami.mydomain.com' 192.168.1.51
on the laptop results in “Internal Server Error”.How did you check that mydomain is being resolved correctly on the laptop?
ping whoami.mydomain.com
hits 192.168.1.51.What do you get with curl from the other VM, or from the router, or from the host machine of the VM?
From the router:
Shell Output - curl -L -k --header 'Host: whoami.mydomain.com' 192.168.1.51 % Total % Received % Xferd Average Speed Time Time Time Current Dload Upload Total Spent Left Speed 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 --:--:-- --:--:-- --:--:-- 0- 100 17 100 17 0 0 8200 0 --:--:-- --:--:-- --:--:-- 17000 100 21 100 21 0 0 649 0 --:--:-- --:--:-- --:--:-- 649 Internal Server Error
From the wireguard client container on the “client” VM:
curl -L -k --header 'Host: whoami.mydomain.com' 192.168.1.51 Internal Server Error
From the traefik container on the “client” VM:
$ curl -L -k --header 'Host: whoami.mydomain.com' 192.168.1.51 Internal Server Error
From the “client” VM itself:
# curl -L -k --header 'Host: whoami.mydomain.com' 192.168.1.51 Internal Server Error
From the wireguard container on the “server” VM:
# curl -L -k --header 'Host: whoami.mydomain.com' 192.168.1.51 Internal Server Error
From the traefik container on the “server” VM (This is interesting. Why can’t I ping from this traefik installation but a can from the other? But even though it won’t ping, it did resolve to the correct IP):
$ ping whoami.mydomain.com PING whoami.mydomain.com (192.168.1.51): 56 data bytes ping: permission denied (are you root?)
From the “server” VM itself:
# curl -L -k --header 'Host: whoami.mydomain.com' 192.168.1.51 Internal Server Error
Also, just to make sure the app is indeed running, I curled it from it’s own container (I’m using myapp here instead of whoami, because whoami doesn’t have a shell):
$ curl -L -k --header 'Host: myapp.mydomain.com localhost:8080
I can’t seem to display html tags in this comment, but the results are the html tags for the web page for the app - so the app is up and running
Just a few thoughts:
- Did you enable access logs in Traefik as well as setting global log level to debug? This usually gives a lot more info about whats going on
- Are the containers using the same docker network or host network, so they can reach each other?
Thanks for helping, @[email protected].
Both traefik containers (on the “server” and “client” VMs) and the wireguard server container were built with
TRAEFIK_NETWORK_MODE=host
. The VMs can ping each other and the Wireguard containers can ping each other.Both traefik containers were built with
TRAEFIK_LOG_LEVEL=warn
but I changed them both toTRAEFIK_LOG_LEVEL=info
just now. There’s a tad more info in the logs, but nothing that seems pertinent.How about the Traefik access logs (separate from the main log), do they reveal anything?
From traefik’s access.log:
{"ClientAddr":"192.168.1.17:45930","ClientHost":"192.168.1.17","ClientPort":"45930","ClientUsername":"-","DownstreamContentSize":21,"DownstreamStatus":500,"Duration":13526669,"OriginContentSize":21,"OriginDuration":13462593,"OriginStatus":500,"Overhead":64076,"RequestAddr":"whoami.mydomain.com","RequestContentSize":0,"RequestCount":16032,"RequestHost":"whoami.mydomain.com","RequestMethod":"GET","RequestPath":"/","RequestPort":"-","RequestProtocol":"HTTP/2.0","RequestScheme":"https","RetryAttempts":0,"RouterName":"websecure-whoami-vpn@file","ServiceAddr":"10.13.16.1","ServiceName":"whoami-vpn@file","ServiceURL":{"Scheme":"https","Opaque":"","User":null,"Host":"10.13.16.1","Path":"","RawPath":"","OmitHost":false,"ForceQuery":false,"RawQuery":"","Fragment":"","RawFragment":""},"StartLocal":"2024-04-30T00:21:51.533176765Z","StartUTC":"2024-04-30T00:21:51.533176765Z","TLSCipher":"TLS_CHACHA20_POLY1305_SHA256","TLSVersion":"1.3","entryPointName":"websecure","level":"info","msg":"","time":"2024-04-30T00:21:51Z"} {"ClientAddr":"192.168.1.17:45930","ClientHost":"192.168.1.17","ClientPort":"45930","ClientUsername":"-","DownstreamContentSize":21,"DownstreamStatus":500,"Duration":13754666,"OriginContentSize":21,"OriginDuration":13696179,"OriginStatus":500,"Overhead":58487,"RequestAddr":"whoami.mydomain.com","RequestContentSize":0,"RequestCount":16033,"RequestHost":"whoami.mydomain.com","RequestMethod":"GET","RequestPath":"/favicon.ico","RequestPort":"-","RequestProtocol":"HTTP/2.0","RequestScheme":"https","RetryAttempts":0,"RouterName":"websecure-whoami-vpn@file","ServiceAddr":"10.13.16.1","ServiceName":"whoami-vpn@file","ServiceURL":{"Scheme":"https","Opaque":"","User":null,"Host":"10.13.16.1","Path":"","RawPath":"","OmitHost":false,"ForceQuery":false,"RawQuery":"","Fragment":"","RawFragment":""},"StartLocal":"2024-04-30T00:21:51.74274202Z","StartUTC":"2024-04-30T00:21:51.74274202Z","TLSCipher":"TLS_CHACHA20_POLY1305_SHA256","TLSVersion":"1.3","entryPointName":"websecure","level":"info","msg":"","time":"2024-04-30T00:21:51Z"}
All I can tell from this is that there is a DownstreatStatus of 500. I don’t know what that means.
Have you tried accessing your service url from inside the Traefik container? Eg. wget https://10.13.16.1? Also you seem to be accessing the service url with https, which usually requires insecureSkipVerify=true. Otherwise you might get http-500 error downstream.
I should add that I’m running Traefik 2.11.2 and wireguard from the Linuxserver image
lscr.io/linuxserver/wireguard
version v1.0.20210914-ls22.@[email protected], @[email protected], and @[email protected],
THanks for your help. My main issue ended up being that I was trying to use Let’s Encrypt’s staging mode, but since staging certs are self-signed, Traefik was not accepting the requests. Also, though I had to switch Traefik’s logging level to Info instead of error to see that.
Acronyms, initialisms, abbreviations, contractions, and other phrases which expand to something larger, that I’ve seen in this thread:
Fewer Letters More Letters DNS Domain Name Service/System HTTP Hypertext Transfer Protocol, the Web IP Internet Protocol VPN Virtual Private Network
4 acronyms in this thread; the most compressed thread commented on today has 9 acronyms.
[Thread #723 for this sub, first seen 29th Apr 2024, 11:55] [FAQ] [Full list] [Contact] [Source code]
500 errors typically log a stack trace in the server logs. Have you checked there? That would give more indication of where to start debugging.
By “server log”, do you mean traefik’s log? If so, this is the only thing I could find (and I don’t know what it means): https://lemmy.d.thewooskeys.com/comment/514711
No. Traefik says the 500 error came from downstream. So that means either wireguard or myapp. Check the logs for those.