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Docker container with Hitch, a scalable TLS proxy by Varnish Software

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Hitch Docker Image Build Status

This project builds and ships Hitch as a Docker image. Hitch is a scalable TLS proxy by Varnish Software. The docker image is based on Alpine Linux Docker Image which provides a tiny base image. The full container is less than 8 megabytes.

If you have any problems with this image please report issues on Github. Pull requests & suggestions are also welcome.

Hitch is built from the latest stable tarball. We provide tags for the according Hitch version and also a latest version pointing to the most recent tag. In case we have to re-release a version we add _1 or alike to the version, for example 1.3.1_1.

Hitch environment variables

You can change its behavior by changing the following environment variables:

HITCH_PEM    /etc/ssl/hitch/combined.pem
HITCH_PARAMS "--backend=[localhost]:80 --frontend=[*]:443"
HITCH_CIPHER EECDH+AESGCM:EDH+AESGCM:AES256+EECDH:AES256+EDH

Please refer to the Hitch help page and the Github repository documentation for more information.

Use the pre built image

The pre built image can be downloaded using Docker.

docker pull zazukoians/hitch

Build the Docker image by yourself

You can also adjust and build the image according to your needs. Just clone the repository and then execute the build command.

docker build -t zazukoians/hitch .

Start the container

The container has all pre requisites to run Hitch. In case you do not provide your own SSL certificate it will create its own self-signed SSL certificate on first startup according to the Hitch documentation.

By default it will create a certificate for the domain example.com, you can override this by providing another name via environment variables. This is not very useful for production but you can start playing around with the image.

docker run --rm -i -d -p 80 -e DOMAIN=myown.example.com zazukoians/hitch

Note that this alone won't be very useful as the default configuration points to a backend server like Varnish on localhost port 80. This will not work as there is no such server running in this image. Instead combine this image with an instance of a proxy like Varnish Cache. Link the proxy port to this image and point to the correct backend by adjusting the --backend option in HITCH_PARAMS.

In our setup we override /etc/ssl/hitch by a local directory on the Docker host containing the real certificate and then we link the hitch image with an instance of Varnish Cache, for example:

docker run -p 443:443 --name my-hitch -e HITCH_PEM=/etc/ssl/hitch/myreal.pem  -e HITCH_PARAMS="--backend=[varnish]:80 --frontend=[*]:443" --link my-varnish:varnish -v /full/path/on/docker/host/to/conf/hitch/certs:/etc/ssl/hitch zazukoians/hitch

This assumes that there is another Docker image called my-varnish available and it points hitch to this machine. Adjust the name according to whatever Varnish image you might use. We maintain our own version available here

Start the container and keep control

The command above starts the container and runs it in foreground. You can get a console in this image by executing

docker run -ti -p 443 zazukoians/hitch /bin/bash

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Docker container with Hitch, a scalable TLS proxy by Varnish Software

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