Update docs/docs/guides/reverse_proxy.md

Co-authored-by: Nicolas Mowen <nickmowen213@gmail.com>
This commit is contained in:
Paul Blacknell 2022-12-15 22:55:46 +00:00 committed by GitHub
parent 8e51195fde
commit de51061901
No known key found for this signature in database
GPG Key ID: 4AEE18F83AFDEB23

View File

@ -7,7 +7,7 @@ A common way of accomplishing this is to use a reverse proxy webserver between y
A reverse proxy accepts HTTP requests from the public internet and redirects them transparently to internal webserver(s) on your network.
The suggested steps are:
- **Configure** a 'proxy' HTTP webserver (such as [Apache2](https://httpd.apache.org/docs/current/)) and only expose ports 80/443 from this webserver to the internet
- **Configure** a 'proxy' HTTP webserver (such as [Apache2](https://httpd.apache.org/docs/current/) or [NPM](https://github.com/NginxProxyManager/nginx-proxy-manager)) and only expose ports 80/443 from this webserver to the internet
- **Encrypt** content from the proxy webserver by installing SSL (such as with [Let's Encrypt](https://letsencrypt.org/)). Note that SSL is then not required on your Frigate webserver as the proxy encrypts all requests for you
- **Restrict** access to your Frigate instance at the proxy using, for example, password authentication