this post was submitted on 18 Feb 2026
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Hello all,

I figured that a chunk of the selfhost community is using Caddy, so decided to post my query here. I am a novice in Caddy, so I might be saying some incorrect terms.

Some information

  • The router and the host running Caddy, are different machines
  • The router page is running HTTP, but I am accessing it via HTTPS through Caddy
  • Caddy is running via Docker.

I have a couple of services running on a host, so I access them via Caddy's reverse proxy. Now I am also trying to access my router login via the same reverse proxy. This is what the router entry in the caddyfile looks like

.
.
{
    local_certs
}
login.router.lan {
	reverse_proxy 192.168.1.1:80
}
.
.

With this entry, I can access the login page. However, when I enter the password, I feel like it's attempting to login but then it just comes back to the original login page. When I access it directly, the login is successful. I also have Pihole running and the Pihole login process works fine. So I suspect that the router login page is expecting some extra information from Caddy to forward it to the login page.

After some searching online and some LLM wrangling, I figured it's some cookie issue or my login page is expecting a certain host.

What should I add to my Caddyfile so that the login redirect works?

Edit1: Clarification! Everything is behind wireguard. Nothing is exposed to public (other than wireguard). I only access it within my home. The router login page cannot be accessed from outside.

Edit2: After a discussion with a friend, I have slightly narrowed it down (maybe, I'm not sure) to a http/https issue. When I made this change, the login redirection works.

http://login.router.lan/ {
    reverse_proxy 192.168.1.1:80
}

But this means that all communication is over HTTP.

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[–] lmr0x61@lemmy.ml 1 points 1 month ago

I have to echo what others have said, and tell you exposing your router’s login to the public internet is very risky (if you’re referring to the WiFi router in your home). I would strongly recommend some other solution to whatever broader problem you’re trying to solve with this—why do you need to access your router login from outside your home? Can the logging in (and presumably tinkering) be done at home? Definitely things to think through before proceeding.