1
0
mirror of https://github.com/kataras/iris.git synced 2025-12-20 03:17:04 +00:00

Add a simple Caddy+Iris tutorial 👍

Former-commit-id: 8761afce72aa35b91c9b5a958f1cafc027aabddd
This commit is contained in:
kataras
2017-08-28 12:26:45 +03:00
parent e2600450f7
commit 674622f814
7 changed files with 194 additions and 49 deletions

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,24 @@
# Caddy loves Iris
The `Caddyfile` shows how you can use caddy to listen on ports 80 & 443 and sit in front of iris webserver(s) that serving on a different port (9091 and 9092 in this case; see Caddyfile).
## Running our two web servers
1. Go to `$GOPATH/src/github.com/kataras/iris/_examples/tutorial/caddy/server1`
2. Open a terminal window and execute `go run main.go`
3. Go to `$GOPATH/src/github.com/kataras/iris/_examples/tutorial/caddy/server2`
4. Open a new terminal window and execute `go run main.go`
## Caddy installation
1. Download caddy: https://caddyserver.com/download
2. Extract its contents where the `Caddyfile` is located, the `$GOPATH/src/github.com/kataras/iris/_examples/tutorial/caddy` in this case
3. Open, read and modify the `Caddyfile` to see by yourself how easy it is to configure the servers
4. Run `caddy` directly or open a terminal window and execute `caddy`
5. Go to `https://example.com` and `https://api.example.com/user/42`
## Notes
Iris has the `app.Run(iris.AutoTLS(":443", "example.com", "mail@example.com"))` which does
the exactly same thing but caddy is a great tool that helps you when you run multiple web servers from one host machine, i.e iris, apache, tomcat.