this post was submitted on 13 Nov 2023
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The documentation it's surprisingly bad at explaining common patterns of use.
It is also a bit thicker compared to nginx or HAproxy.
Totally agree.
The main problem is it's all written as a reference -- for people who already understand what/how, who need to just refresh their memory of the actual syntax.
There's very little explanatory stuff for people who need more than that. I had to read the same stuff multiple times, traversing many (or often, the same!) links, make notes, and then form a mental picture of what is going on.
Caddy maintainer here, if you could point to specific sections you find confusing, that would help. We rarely receive actionable feedback about the docs, so it's hard for us to make improvements.
I found the practical use cases helpful, probably should expand that cookbook.
E.g. I've found this sort of construct helpful (not sure how safe using {host} here is though):
It is hard to understand the whole thinking behind the config system, with directives, matchers, placeholders, invisible reordering of rules, and all the other concepts. And to add to the complication, Caddyfile and API are completely distinct systems and it is not very clearly explained [that one really ought to be using Caddyfile and ignoring the API for most use cases]. And that distros do ship Caddyfile-based systemd service now (some also API-based, and perhaps with root-only control socket to add to the confusion).
I did dig into it to really understand how it works but that took a couple of weeks to digest, which is a lot for someone who only needs a simple server/proxy.