80 and 443 are the standard ports for webpages (http and https respectively). Lot of selfhosted software with web-based frontends will therefore try to use them.
You can change the ports for the bitwarden container to whatever you like, but the “proper” way to set up multiple services with web-based interfaces like this, is to use a reverse proxy to make them all accessible via these two standard ports. (Caddy is popular for this)
You can then access them using their respective subdomains or subpaths.
80 and 443 are the standard ports for webpages (http and https respectively). Lot of selfhosted software with web-based frontends will therefore try to use them.
You can change the ports for the bitwarden container to whatever you like, but the “proper” way to set up multiple services with web-based interfaces like this, is to use a reverse proxy to make them all accessible via these two standard ports. (Caddy is popular for this)
You can then access them using their respective subdomains or subpaths.