+++ title = "Host your own private search engine with SearXNG" date = 2023-12-31 draft = false [taxonomies] categories = ["Guides"] tags = ["searxng", "privacy", "selfhosted", "nixos"] [extra] lang = "en" toc = true comment = true copy = true math = false mermaid = false +++ # Introduction [SearXNG](https://docs.searxng.org/), put in its own words, is a 'free internet metasearch engine'. Note that it describes itself as a *metasearch* engine specifically - unlike your traditional search engine like Google or Bing, SearXNG does things a little bit differently: It aggregrates the results produced by search services like those aforementioned, and feeds them back to you. Because of this key detail and a great deal of effort by those who've helped shape it, SearXNG protects your privacy, and does so very well: - Private data from requests going to the search services it aggregrates results from is removed - It does **not** forward *anything* to any third parties through search services - Private data is *also* removed from requests going to the results pages Furthermore, SearXNG can be configured to use [Tor](https://torproject.org). However, the aspect of privacy isn't the only great selling feature of the engine; from my use of the engine so far, it's also great at...searching (is that a surprise?). The fact that it's a metasearch engine plays a key role in this, as it provides SearXNG the ability to pull content more efficiently and gives *you* the ability to further tailor your experience. # Setting up SearXNG ## Installing the service As you may have expected if you've used NixOS for a while, searxng is packaged *and* has a service on NixOS. This makes setting it up just that much easier. To get started, place somewhere in your *system* config the following: ```nix { # ... services.searx = { enable = true; settings = { server = { port = 8888; bind_address = "127.0.0.1"; secret_key = "@SEARX_SECRET_KEY@"; base_url = "https://search.devraza.duckdns.org/"; # replace with wherever you want to host yours }; }; }; # ... } ``` The snippet above starts the `searx` systemd service for listening on port `8888`, and assumes a `base_url` of `https://search.devraza.duckdns.org`. Now that we've got the actual `searx` instance running, we can now set up a reverse proxy allowing the service to be accessed remotely (whether this is within your local network or across the internet is up to you). ## Setting up a reverse proxy ### What is a reverse proxy? Before I get started with the technical details of setting this up, I'd like to briefly clarify what a reverse proxy exactly is (to my understanding). Let's get the wikipedia definition of reverse proxy out of the way first: > [...] a reverse proxy is an application that sits in front of back-end applications and forwards client requests to those applications. [...] However, you might be confused as to what this actually means; I'll give an example of the usage of reverse proxies to better explain this: - Suppose you've got a few services running on a server (for demonstration purposes, let's name these `x`, `y` and `z`), each running on their own unique port. - Assuming you had a domain, and wanted to access all of these services from their own unique sub-domains (e.g. `x.yourdomain.com`, `y.yourdomain.com` and `z.yourdomain.com`), you would have to use a reverse proxy. - This reverse proxy would take in requests from clients going to sub-domains, and forward these requests to the appropriate port on your machine for the service being requested. The concept should be clear now, if it wasn't already. ### Using NGINX to set up the reverse proxy NGINX is a popular web server that supports the creation of virtual hosts and the usage of reverse proxies. To accomodate our `searx` instance, we append the following to our NixOS server configuration: ```nix,hl_lines=12,linenos { # ... services.nginx = { enable = true; # any extra configuration here virtualHosts = { "search" = { # this can be anything, being an arbitrary identifier forceSSL = true; serverName = "search.yourdomain.com"; # replace this with whatever you're serving from # SearX proxy locations."/" = { proxyPass = "http://${toString config.services.searx.settings.server.bind_address}:${toString config.services.searx.settings.server.port}"; proxyWebsockets = true; recommendedProxySettings = true; }; }; }; }; # ... } ``` {% note(header="Note") %} The expression highlighted above is used to dynamically adjust the location NGINX will forward requests to, depending on your `searx` config {% end %} After saving your changes and rebuilding your server's system configuration (as usual), you should have a working *private* instance of SearXNG that you can access using the `serverName` you've given it. Set your browser to use this as your search engine using the relevant documentation (with Firefox this is as easy as right-clicking on the URL after opening up the page and clicking a button). Enjoy!