This hosting guide shows you how to self-host n8n on a DigitalOcean droplet. It uses:
Caddy (a reverse proxy) to allow access to the Droplet from the internet. Caddy will also automatically create and manage SSL / TLS certificates for your n8n instance.
Docker Compose to create and define the application components and how they work together.
n8n recommends self-hosting for expert users. Mistakes can lead to data loss, security issues, and downtime. If you aren't experienced at managing servers, n8n recommends n8n Cloud.
Stable and Beta versions
n8n releases a new minor version most weeks. The stable version is for production use. beta is the most recent release. The beta version may be unstable. To report issues, use the forum.
The rest of this guide requires you to log in to the Droplet using a terminal with SSH. Refer to How to Connect to Droplets with SSH for more information.
You should create a new user, to avoid working as the root user:
Log in as root.
Create a new user:
adduser <username>
Follow the prompts in the CLI to finish creating the user.
Grant the new user administrative privileges:
usermod -aG sudo <username>
You can now run commands with superuser privileges by using sudo before the command.
Docker Compose, n8n, and Caddy require a series of folders and configuration files. You can clone these from this repository into the home folder of the logged-in user on your Droplet. The following steps will tell you which file to change and what changes to make.
The host operating system (the DigitalOcean Droplet) copies the two folders you created to Docker containers to make them available to Docker. The two folders are:
caddy_config: Holds the Caddy configuration files.
local_files: A folder for files you upload or add using n8n.
n8n typically operates on a subdomain. Create a DNS record with your provider for the subdomain and point it to the IP address of the Droplet. The exact steps for this depend on your DNS provider, but typically you need to create a new "A" record for the n8n subdomain. DigitalOcean provide An Introduction to DNS Terminology, Components, and Concepts.
n8n runs as a web application, so the Droplet needs to allow incoming access to traffic on port 80 for non-secure traffic, and port 443 for secure traffic.
Open the following ports in the Droplet's firewall by running the following two commands:
n8n needs some environment variables set to pass to the application running in the Docker container. The example .env file contains placeholders you need to replace with values of your own.
Open the file with the following command:
nano .env
The file contains inline comments to help you know what to change.
The Docker Compose file (docker-compose.yml) defines the services the application needs, in this case Caddy and n8n.
The Caddy service definition defines the ports it uses and the local volumes to copy to the containers.
The n8n service definition defines the ports it uses, the environment variables n8n needs to run (some defined in the .env file), and the volumes it needs to copy to the containers.
The Docker Compose file uses the environment variables set in the .env file, so you shouldn't need to change it's content, but to take a look, run the following command:
Caddy needs to know which domains it should serve, and which port to expose to the outside world. Edit the Caddyfile file in the caddy_config folder.
nano caddy_config/Caddyfile
Change the placeholder domain to yours. If you followed the steps to name the subdomain n8n, your full domain is similar to n8n.example.com. The n8n in the reverse_proxy setting tells Caddy to use the service definition defined in the docker-compose.yml file:
In your browser, open the URL formed of the subdomain and domain name defined earlier. Enter the user name and password defined earlier, and you should be able to access n8n.
If you run n8n using a Docker Compose file, follow these steps to update n8n:
# Navigate to the directory containing your docker compose filecd </path/to/your/compose/file/directory># Pull latest versiondocker compose pull# Stop and remove older versiondocker compose down# Start the containerdocker compose up -d