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Simple Alpine-built scratch-runtime Dockerfile for cloudflared, with support for multiple architectures.

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Erisa's Cloudflared Docker Image

This repository contains a simple Dockerfile to build cloudflared, the client for Cloudflare Tunnel, from source.

Note

This Docker image is not an official Cloudflare product.

The aim is to support multiple architectures.
The public image currently supports:

Docker target Also known as Notes
linux/amd64 x86_64 Majority of modern PCs and servers.
linux/386 x86 32-bit Intel/AMD CPUs. Typically really old computer hardware. These images are untested.
linux/arm64 aarch64 64-bit ARM hardware. For example Apple Silicon or Raspberry Pi 2/3/4 running a 64-bit OS.
linux/arm/v7 armhf 32-bit ARM hardware. For example most Raspberry Pi models running Raspberry Pi OS.
linux/arm/v6 armel Older 32-bit ARM hardware. Mostly Raspberry Pi 1/0/0W but there may be others.
linux/s390x IBM Z Linux on IBM Z for IBM mainframes, most notably IBM Cloud.
linux/ppc64le ppc64el Tested on IBM Cloud Power Systems Virtual Server
linux/riscv64 riscv64 CPUs from the future. Tested on Scaleway Labs RV1.

The public image corresponding to this Dockerfile is erisamoe/cloudflared and should work in mostly the same way as the official image.

Note

If you have any problems or questions with this image, either open a GitHub Issue or join the Cloudflare Developers Discord Server and ping @Erisa in #general-help, #general-discussions or #off-topic with your question.

Cloudflare Tunnel

Dashboard setup (Recommended)

A docker-compose example with a Zero Trust dashboard setup would be:

services:
  cloudflared:
    image: erisamoe/cloudflared
    restart: unless-stopped
    command: tunnel run
    environment:
      - TUNNEL_TOKEN=${TUNNEL_TOKEN}
    depends_on:
      - mycontainer

Where an .env file in the same directory contains TUNNEL_TOKEN= set to the token given by the Zero Trust dashboard. For more information see the Cloudflare Blog

Note A previous version of this README recommended using --token ${CLOUDFLARED_TOKEN}, which is a less secure way of handing off the token. Setting the TUNNEL_TOKEN variable seems to be a better way of approaching this.

Config file setup (Named tunnel)

An example for a setup with a local config would be:

services:
  cloudflared:
    image: erisamoe/cloudflared
    restart: unless-stopped # or 'always' to survive container stops
    volumes:
      - ./cloudflared:/etc/cloudflared
    command: tunnel run mytunnel
    depends_on:
      - mycontainer

Where ./cloudflared is a folder containing the .json or .pem credentials and config.yml for a tunnel.

An example config.yml might look like:

tunnel: uuid-for-tunnel
#Optional
#credentials-file: /etc/cloudflared/uuid-for-tunnel.json

ingress:
  - hostname: mywebsite.com
    service: http://nginx:80
  - service: http_status:404

For more information, refer to the Cloudflare Documentation

To acquire a certificate, you'll need to use the login command.
This will spit out /.cloudflared/cert.pem, rather than /etc/cloudflared.

As such, usage would be something like:

docker run -v $PWD/cloudflared:/.cloudflared erisamoe/cloudflared login

to create a folder called cloudflared in your current dir and deposit a cert.pem into it.

To create a tunnel, you can then do:

docker run -v $PWD/cloudflared:/etc/cloudflared erisamoe/cloudflared tunnel create mytunnel

Which gives you a UUID for the new tunnel and and a .json credentials file corresponding to it.

And now you can either use the above compose example or for testing simply just:

docker run -v $PWD/cloudflared:/etc/cloudflared erisamoe/cloudflared --hostname test.example.com --name mytunnel --hello-world

Which will start up a "Hello world" test tunnel on https://test.example.com.

DNS-over-HTTPS

While not the original intent behind the image, you can also use this to host a DNS resolver that speaks to a DNS-over-HTTPS backend.
For example:

docker run -d -p 53:53/udp --name my-dns-forwarder erisamoe/cloudflared proxy-dns --address 0.0.0.0

Would create a container called my-dns-forwarder that responds to DNS requests on your host.
Keep in mind when using this on a public server (e.g. VPS) it will by default listen on all interfaces, making you a public DNS resolver on the internet.
You can sidestep this by changing the -p to instead be -p 127.0.0.01:53:53/udp to listen on localhost instead.

You can also add upstreams with --upstream https://dns.example.com for example. By default, Cloudflare DNS is used.

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