Difference between revisions of "Letsencrypt"

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{{Languages|Letsencrypt}}
 
{{Languages|Letsencrypt}}
 
{{Level|Medium}}
 
{{Level|Medium}}
==Introduction==
+
<!-- here we define the contrib name variable -->
 +
<!-- we get the page title, remove suffix for translated version; if needed you can define there with the value you want-->
 +
{{#vardefine:contribname| {{lc: {{#titleparts:  {{BASEPAGENAME}} |1}} }} }}
 +
{{#vardefine:smecontribname| smeserver-{{lc: {{#titleparts:  {{BASEPAGENAME}} |1}} }} }}
 +
<!-- we define the language -->
 +
{{#vardefine:lang| {{lc:  {{#titleparts:    {{PAGENAME}} | | -1}}  }} |en }}
 +
{{Infobox contribs
 +
|name={{#var:contribname}}
 +
|image={{#var:contribname}}.jpg
 +
|description_image= {{#var:contribname}} logo
 +
|maintainer= John Crisp
 +
|licence= MIT license
 +
|url= https://github.com/dehydrated-io/dehydrated
 +
|category= certificates
 +
|tags=dehydrated,letsencrypt,dns,http,ssl
 +
}}
 +
==Maintainer==
 +
John Crisp
 +
 
 +
== Version ==
 +
{{#set: Version=Contrib10}}
 +
{{#smeversion:smeserver-letsencrypt }}
 +
<br>
 +
 
 +
==Description==
  
 
{{warning box| The original protocol used by Let’s Encrypt for certificate issuance and management is called ACMEv1. In March of 2018 Letsencrypt introduced support for ACMEv2, a newer version of the protocol that matches what was finalized today as RFC 8555 328. They have been encouraging subscribers to move to the ACMEv2 protocol.
 
{{warning box| The original protocol used by Let’s Encrypt for certificate issuance and management is called ACMEv1. In March of 2018 Letsencrypt introduced support for ACMEv2, a newer version of the protocol that matches what was finalized today as RFC 8555 328. They have been encouraging subscribers to move to the ACMEv2 protocol.
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Multiple clients are available for the Letsencrypt services.  The official "certbot" client from letsencrypt.org is quite full-featured, but has a number of dependencies that it needs to install.  It also requires a newer version of Python than is included with a standard SME Server installation.  Due to this complexity, and the lack of compatibility with SME 8.x, this document describes installation and use of ''[https://github.com/lukas2511/dehydrated dehydrated]'', an alternative client implemented as a BASH shell script.
 
Multiple clients are available for the Letsencrypt services.  The official "certbot" client from letsencrypt.org is quite full-featured, but has a number of dependencies that it needs to install.  It also requires a newer version of Python than is included with a standard SME Server installation.  Due to this complexity, and the lack of compatibility with SME 8.x, this document describes installation and use of ''[https://github.com/lukas2511/dehydrated dehydrated]'', an alternative client implemented as a BASH shell script.
 
=== Version ===
 
{{#set: Version=Contrib10}}
 
{{#smeversion:smeserver-letsencrypt }}
 
<br>
 
  
 
==Prerequisites==
 
==Prerequisites==
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==Installation of Dehydrated letsencrypt contrib==
 
==Installation of Dehydrated letsencrypt contrib==
 
John Crisp has prepared a contrib that installs the dehydrated script, creates the appropriate configuration files, and integrates with the SME templates system.  This is the simplest way to install dehydrated on your SME Server.
 
John Crisp has prepared a contrib that installs the dehydrated script, creates the appropriate configuration files, and integrates with the SME templates system.  This is the simplest way to install dehydrated on your SME Server.
 
+
<tabs container style="display: inline-block;"><tab name="For SME 10">
 
 
<tabs container><tab name="For SME 10">
 
 
  yum install smeserver-letsencrypt
 
  yum install smeserver-letsencrypt
  
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=== Rush jobs ===
 
=== Rush jobs ===
for the test ('''adjust the domains and hosts'''):
+
For the test ('''adjust the domains and hosts'''):
 
<tabs container style="display: inline-block;"><tab name="For SME 10">
 
<tabs container style="display: inline-block;"><tab name="For SME 10">
 
  config setprop letsencrypt ACCEPT_TERMS yes status test
 
  config setprop letsencrypt ACCEPT_TERMS yes status test
 +
# really fast job to enable the primary domain
 +
db domains setprop $(config get DomainName) letsencryptSSLcert enabled
 
  #foreach of your domains you want SSL do the following
 
  #foreach of your domains you want SSL do the following
 
  db domains setprop '''domain1.com''' letsencryptSSLcert enabled
 
  db domains setprop '''domain1.com''' letsencryptSSLcert enabled
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Check that the certificates are available ( your browser will still issue an error, but you can explore the content of the certificate to see that the Let's Encrypt test CA was used to sign your SSL certificate and that all your domains and hosts are in the "Certificate Subject Alt Name" property.
 
Check that the certificates are available ( your browser will still issue an error, but you can explore the content of the certificate to see that the Let's Encrypt test CA was used to sign your SSL certificate and that all your domains and hosts are in the "Certificate Subject Alt Name" property.
  
for the production ('''adjust your email'''):
+
For the production ('''adjust your email'''):
 
<tabs container style="display: inline-block;"><tab name="For SME 10">
 
<tabs container style="display: inline-block;"><tab name="For SME 10">
  config setprop letsencrypt status enabled email '''admin@domain1.com'''
+
  config setprop letsencrypt status enabled email admin@$(config get DomainName)
 
  signal-event smeserver-letsencrypt-update
 
  signal-event smeserver-letsencrypt-update
 
  dehydrated -c -x
 
  dehydrated -c -x
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With the system configuration described above, setting this to "domains" will obtain a certificate covering domain1.com and domain2.com, but not www.domain1.com, etc.  Setting it to "hosts" will obtain a certificate covering www.domain1.com, mail.domain1.com, ftp.domain1.com, etc., but not domain1.com or domain2.com.  Setting this property to "all" will include all domain names and hostnames in the certificate. '''see [[Letsencrypt#Some_challenges_complete_successfully_but_some_hostnames_fail|NOTE]] before setting this to "all"'''
+
With the system configuration described above, setting this to "domains" will obtain a certificate covering domain1.com and domain2.com, but not www.domain1.com, etc.  Setting it to "hosts" will obtain a certificate covering www.domain1.com, mail.domain1.com, ftp.domain1.com, etc., but not domain1.com or domain2.com.  Setting this property to "all" will include all domain names and hostnames in the certificate. '''See [[Letsencrypt/Troubleshooting#Some_challenges_complete_successfully_but_some_hostnames_fail|NOTE]] before setting this to "all".'''
  
 
==== Enable test mode ====
 
==== Enable test mode ====
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|
 
|
 
|email
 
|email
|enter the email to create account and recieve updates from Let's Encrypt
+
|enter the email to create account and receive updates from Let's Encrypt
 
|-
 
|-
 
|hookScript
 
|hookScript
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|disabled
 
|disabled
 
|yes,disabled
 
|yes,disabled
|default disabled, if disabled will only ask cert for hosts (if selected accodring to configure and "letsencryptSSLcert enabled") for hosts with type=Self. If set to yes will include any listed hosts wether remote or local.
+
|default disabled, if disabled will only ask cert for hosts (if selected according to configure and "letsencryptSSLcert enabled") for hosts with type=Self. If set to yes will include any listed hosts whether remote or local.
 
|-
 
|-
 
|keysize
 
|keysize
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|base 2 number
 
|base 2 number
 
|length of your certificate's private key, if you don't want the '''default of 4096''' bits.  This should not be necessary in most cases, but if desired, use this command to do so:
 
|length of your certificate's private key, if you don't want the '''default of 4096''' bits.  This should not be necessary in most cases, but if desired, use this command to do so:
|-
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|-
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
 
|-
 
|-
 
|status
 
|status
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== Troubleshooting ==
 
== Troubleshooting ==
===Certificate Errors===
+
see [[Letsencrypt/Troubleshooting]]
Errors in the certificate files may prevent Apache and some other services from starting.  If you previously had custom settings for modSSL, revert those with:
 
config setprop modSSL crt (old value)
 
config setprop modSSL key (old value)
 
config setprop modSSL CertificateChainFile (old value--if this property was empty, delete it using the command line below)
 
 
 
If you did not have custom settings for modSSL, remove your changes with:
 
config delprop modSSL crt
 
config delprop modSSL key
 
config delprop modSSL CertificateChainFile
 
 
 
Once you've made these changes, do:
 
signal-event post-upgrade
 
signal-event reboot
 
 
 
Also see
 
 
 
https://wiki.contribs.org/Useful_Commands#How_to_simply_recreate_the_certificate_for_SME_Server
 
 
 
rm /home/e-smith/ssl.{crt,key,pem}/*
 
config delprop modSSL CommonName
 
config delprop modSSL crt
 
config delprop modSSL key
 
signal-event post-upgrade
 
signal-event reboot
 
 
 
===Authorization Errors===
 
The first thing is to check all your domains can resolve
 
 
 
http://my.domain/.well-known/acme-challenge
 
 
 
Check that the following files are correctly generated
 
 
 
/etc/dehydrated/config
 
/etc/dehydrated/domains.txt
 
 
 
Set letsencrypt back to test and remove any generated keys
 
 
 
db configuration setprop letsencrypt status test
 
 
 
rm /etc/dehydrated/certs/* -rf
 
rm /etc/dehydrated/accounts/* -rf
 
 
 
Then run letsencrypt again
 
 
 
dehydrated -c
 
 
 
To restore the original certificates:
 
 
 
config delprop modSSL CertificateChainFile
 
config delprop modSSL crt
 
config delprop modSSL key
 
 
 
signal-event console-save
 
 
 
===Errors===
 
 
 
 
 
====No registration exists matching provided key====
 
 
 
 
 
If you see the following:
 
 
 
{"type":"urn:acme:error:unauthorized","detail":"No registration exists matching provided key","status":403}
 
 
 
https://github.com/lukas2511/letsencrypt.sh/issues/2
 
 
 
See above for removing private keys and regenerating
 
 
 
====rateLimited, Too many currently pending Authorizations====
 
 
 
If you see something like this you may have hit the rate limit:
 
 
 
{"type":"urn:acme:error:rateLimited","detail":"Error creating new authz :: Too many currently pending authorizations.","status":429}
 
 
 
https://github.com/lukas2511/letsencrypt.sh/blob/master/docs/staging.md
 
 
 
https://letsencrypt.org/docs/rate-limits/
 
 
 
====Some challenges complete successfully but some hostnames fail====
 
 
 
If you see some of your challenges returned without error but some fail, you possibly do not have Public DNS A or MX records for all the host names that you are adding to your certificate.
 
 
 
Using the command:
 
config setprop letsencrypt configure all
 
 
 
Is likely to cause this error. When a domain is added to an SME server, several host names are created automatically. these include ftp.your-domain.com, wpad.your-domain.com, proxy.your-domain.com, mail.your-domain.com, www.your-domain.com. Most of us do not create public DNS records for all these host names. When letsencrypt issues a challenge for a list of host names and '''ONE''' does not resolve, the challenge will fail and the certificate will not generate at all.
 
 
 
To resolve this, issue the following command:
 
config setprop letsencrypt configure none
 
 
 
Then follow up with the commands to enable letsencrypt for each PUBLIC resolvable domain and hostname:
 
db domains setprop domain1.com letsencryptSSLcert enabled
 
and for each hostname:
 
db hosts setprop www.domain1.com letsencryptSSLcert enabled
 
 
 
db hosts setprop mail.domain1.com letsencryptSSLcert enabled
 
until all the public facing hostnames are enabled
 
followed by:
 
signal-event console-save
 
 
 
Thanks to MSmith for the following forum thread.
 
 
 
https://forums.contribs.org/index.php/topic,53052.0.html
 
 
 
====Challenge fails with unauthorized 403 error====
 
 
 
If your challenge returns something like the following:
 
ERROR: Challenge is invalid! (returned: invalid) (result: {
 
  "type": "http-01",
 
  "status": "invalid",
 
  "error": {
 
    "type": "urn:acme:error:unauthorized",
 
    "detail": "Invalid response from http://www.your-domain.com/.well-known/acme-challenge/<redacted text>
 
    "status": 403
 
and your ''httpd error_log'' on your server shows something like this:
 
(13)Permission denied: access to /.well-known/acme-challenge/<redacted> denied
 
(13)Permission denied: access to /.well-known/acme-challenge/<redacted> denied
 
(13)Permission denied: access to /.well-known/acme-challenge/<redacted> denied
 
 
 
You need to check the ownership and rights on ''/home/e-smith/files/ibays/Primary'' and on ''/home/e-smith/files/ibays/Primary/html''. The contrib creates a hidden working directory at ''/home/e-smith/files/ibays/Primary/html/.well-known'' and inside that directory a second directory with the following path ''/home/e-smith/files/ibays/Primary/html/.well-known/acme-challenge''. The script creates the two new directories with the correct ownerships and rights, however, if the ownership and rights on the ibay and the html directory do not allow the script to access the new location, the challenge will fail with ''access denied''
 
 
 
use the following to check the rights:
 
cd /home/e-smith/files/ibays
 
then
 
ls -l
 
on my test server with only the Primary ibay I get the following (you will probably show a bunch more ibays on your server but we are only concerned with Primary):
 
total 4
 
drwxr-xr-x 5 root root 4096 Jul 25  2016 Primary
 
 
 
If this is not what you see, you need to correct it.
 
 
 
'''THIS MAY BREAK NON STANDARD CUSTOMIZATION OF YOUR SERVER, YOU NEED TO UNDERSTAND WHY THIS HAS BEEN CHANGED BEFORE YOU REVERSE IT'''
 
 
 
From within ''/home/e-smith/files/ibays/'' issue the following:
 
chown root:root Primary
 
If the rights are not correct, issue:
 
chmod 0755 Primary
 
 
 
Next check the html directory.
 
cd /home/e-smith/files/ibays/Primary
 
then
 
ls -l
 
on my test server I have the following
 
[root@backupserver Primary]# ls -l
 
total 12
 
drwxr-s--- 2 admin shared 4096 Jul 25  2016 cgi-bin
 
drwxr-s--- 2 admin shared 4096 Jul 25  2016 files
 
'''drwxr-s--- 3 admin shared 4096 Jun 11 08:06 html'''
 
 
 
If this is not what you see,
 
 
 
'''FIRST READ ABOVE WARNING'''
 
 
 
then adjust as follows
 
chown admin:shared html
 
If the rights are not correct, issue:
 
chmod 2750 html
 
 
 
rerun
 
dehydrated -c
 
 
 
and your challenges should complete.
 
 
 
https://forums.contribs.org/index.php/topic,53147.0.html
 
  
 
== Advanced Topics ==
 
== Advanced Topics ==
 
see [[Letsencrypt/Advanced]]
 
see [[Letsencrypt/Advanced]]
  
= Bugs =
+
 
 +
== Uninstall ==
 +
yum remove {{#var:smecontribname}}  {{#var:contribname}}
 +
== Bugs ==
 
Please raise bugs under the SME-Contribs section in [http://bugs.contribs.org/enter_bug.cgi bugzilla]
 
Please raise bugs under the SME-Contribs section in [http://bugs.contribs.org/enter_bug.cgi bugzilla]
 
and select the smeserver-letsencrypt component or use {{BugzillaFileBug|product=SME%20Contribs|component=smeserver-letsencrypt|title=this link}}
 
and select the smeserver-letsencrypt component or use {{BugzillaFileBug|product=SME%20Contribs|component=smeserver-letsencrypt|title=this link}}
Line 445: Line 293:
 
{{#bugzilla:columns=id,product,version,status,summary |sort=id |order=desc |component=smeserver-letsencrypt |disablecache=1|noresultsmessage="No open bugs found."}}
 
{{#bugzilla:columns=id,product,version,status,summary |sort=id |order=desc |component=smeserver-letsencrypt |disablecache=1|noresultsmessage="No open bugs found."}}
  
= Changelog =
+
== Changelog ==
 
Only released version in smecontrib are listed here.
 
Only released version in smecontrib are listed here.
  

Latest revision as of 09:18, 15 December 2023


PythonIcon.png Skill level: Medium
The instructions on this page require a basic knowledge of linux.




letsencrypt
NeedImage.svg
letsencrypt logo
MaintainerJohn Crisp
Urlhttps://github.com/dehydrated-io/dehydrated
LicenceMIT license
Category

certificates

Tags dehydratedletsencryptdnshttpssl


Maintainer

John Crisp

Version

Add-on 10:
Contrib 9:
smeserver-letsencrypt
The latest version of smeserver-letsencrypt is available in the SME repository, click on the version number(s) for more information.



Description

Warning.png Warning:
The original protocol used by Let’s Encrypt for certificate issuance and management is called ACMEv1. In March of 2018 Letsencrypt introduced support for ACMEv2, a newer version of the protocol that matches what was finalized today as RFC 8555 328. They have been encouraging subscribers to move to the ACMEv2 protocol.

In March 2019 they announced an end of life plan for ACMEv1.

In November of 2019 they will stop allowing new account registrations through their ACMEv1 API endpoint. IMPORTANTLY Existing accounts will continue to function normally.

In June of 2020 they will stop allowing new domains to validate via ACMEv1.

Starting at the beginning of 2021 they will occasionally disable ACMEv1 issuance and renewal for periods of 24 hours, no more than once per month (OCSP service will not be affected). The intention is to induce client errors that might encourage subscribers to update to clients or configurations that use ACMEv2.

Renewal failures should be limited since new domain validations will already be disabled and we recommend renewing certificates 30 days before they expire.

In June of 2021 they will entirely disable ACMEv1 as a viable way to get a Let’s Encrypt certificate.


Let’s Encrypt is a new Certificate Authority: It’s free, automated, and open. Its main purpose is to allow people to encrypt their internet traffic at no cost, easily, and automatically. The certs delivered must be renewed every 3 months.

As of December 2015, the Letsencrypt service is in a public beta state. They issue valid, trusted certificates, but the client code (and, to a lesser extent, the server code) is likely in a state of flux. At least during the initial stages of the public beta, they're implementing rate-limiting, allowing no more than five certificates per domain in a rolling seven-day period. This may make them unsuitable for users of dynamic DNS services. The latest information about rate limiting should be posted on this page of the letsencrypt.org documentation. As of March 26, 2016, the rate limit has been increased to 20 certificates per domain per week.

If you're going to be testing things in ways that would involve requesting lots of certificates in a short period of time, you're encouraged to use the Letsencrypt staging CA for this purpose. Certificates generated by this CA will not be trusted by your browser, and will appear to be issued by the "Fake LE Intermediate X1", but it will allow you to validate the toolchain and workflow.

The current status of the Letsencrypt services can be found on their status page.

Multiple clients are available for the Letsencrypt services. The official "certbot" client from letsencrypt.org is quite full-featured, but has a number of dependencies that it needs to install. It also requires a newer version of Python than is included with a standard SME Server installation. Due to this complexity, and the lack of compatibility with SME 8.x, this document describes installation and use of dehydrated, an alternative client implemented as a BASH shell script.

Prerequisites

The Letsencrypt client and server interact to confirm that the person requesting a certificate for a hostname actually controls that host. For this reason, there are some prerequisites for your configuration. For example, if you're trying to obtain a certificate for www.example.com, the following conditions must be met:

  • www.example.com is a valid domain name--the domain has been registered, and DNS records are published for it.
  • www.example.com resolves to your SME Server--published DNS records give the external IP address of your SME Server when queried for www.example.com.
  • Your SME Server is connected to the Internet, and is able to make outbound connections on ports 80 and 443.
  • Port 80 on your SME Server is open to the Internet (i.e., the Internet can reach your server on port 80)--you aren't behind a firewall, or some ISP filtering, that would block it. If you've made SSL mandatory for the Primary ibay, port 443 must also be open.

Letsencrypt will issue certificates that include multiple hostnames (for example, www.example.com, example.com, and mail.example.com), all of which would be part of the request. All of the conditions above must be true for all of the hostnames you want to include in the certificate.

Make sure you've got this all set up correctly before continuing.

Preparation

Before you begin installation, check to see if you or an installed contrib have configured any custom values for your TLS/SSL certificate:

# config show modSSL

By default it would show:

modSSL=service
   TCPPort=443
   access=public
   status=enabled

If this shows any values for crt, key, or CertificateChainFile, make a note of them. If you encounter an issue with the certificate files generated by Letsencrypt, you'll then be able to revert your changes. To make a 'backup' of your existing key and properties you can issue:

config show modSSL > "/root/db_configuration_modSSL_backup_$(date +%Y%m%d_%H%M%S)"

Installation of Dehydrated letsencrypt contrib

John Crisp has prepared a contrib that installs the dehydrated script, creates the appropriate configuration files, and integrates with the SME templates system. This is the simplest way to install dehydrated on your SME Server.

yum install smeserver-letsencrypt

You will then need to configure the domains and hosts for which you want to ask a certificate. See the following Configuration section.

If your smeaddons repo has been disabled add --enablerepo=smeaddons and reenable it, as it should be by default.

db yum_repositories setprop smeaddons status enabled
signal-event yum-modify

Installation

yum install smeserver-letsencrypt
signal-event console-save

You will then need to configure the domains and hosts for which you want to ask a certificate. See the following Configuration section.

If your smeaddons repo has been disabled add --enablerepo=smeaddons and reenable it, as it should be by default.

db yum_repositories setprop smeaddons status enabled
signal-event yum-modify

Updating

Few reported issue when upgrading the contribs see Bugzilla:10286 and Bugzilla:10097

A full update can be done as follow :

yum update smeserver-letsencrypt dehydrated
config setprop letsencrypt ACCEPT_TERMS yes
signal-event console-save

failure to do this might leave the contribution not working and your certificates not renewed.

Configuration

There are several configuration database entries that need to be made in order to set up this contrib. Most of them tell the scripts which hostnames need to be part of your certificate.

Rush jobs

For the test (adjust the domains and hosts):

config setprop letsencrypt ACCEPT_TERMS yes status test
# really fast job to enable the primary domain
db domains setprop $(config get DomainName) letsencryptSSLcert enabled
#foreach of your domains you want SSL do the following
db domains setprop domain1.com letsencryptSSLcert enabled
#foreach of your hosts (subdomains) you want SSL do the following
db hosts setprop www.domain1.com letsencryptSSLcert enabled
signal-event smeserver-letsencrypt-update
dehydrated -c
config setprop letsencrypt ACCEPT_TERMS yes status test API 2
#foreach of your domains you want SSL do the following
db domains setprop domain1.com letsencryptSSLcert enabled
#foreach of your hosts (subdomains) you want SSL do the following
db hosts setprop www.domain1.com letsencryptSSLcert enabled
signal-event console-save
dehydrated -c

Check that the certificates are available ( your browser will still issue an error, but you can explore the content of the certificate to see that the Let's Encrypt test CA was used to sign your SSL certificate and that all your domains and hosts are in the "Certificate Subject Alt Name" property.

For the production (adjust your email):

config setprop letsencrypt status enabled email admin@$(config get DomainName)
signal-event smeserver-letsencrypt-update
dehydrated -c -x
config setprop letsencrypt status enabled email admin@domain1.com
signal-event console-save
dehydrated -c -x

Step by step configuration

Hosts and domains for the certificate

This contrib will obtain a single certificate from Let's Encrypt. The certificate will include all the domains and hostnames that:

  • Are configured on your SME Server (e.g., through the Server Manager), and
  • Are configured to use Let's Encrypt.

For example, your SME Server may contain the following domains and hostnames:

  • domain1.com
    • www.domain1.com
    • mail.domain1.com
    • ftp.domain1.com
  • domain2.com
    • www.domain2.com
    • mail.domain2.com

For each DOMAIN that you want to be included in the certificate, run this command:

db domains setprop $DOMAIN letsencryptSSLcert enabled

Using the above example, one invocation of the command would look like this:

db domains setprop domain1.com  letsencryptSSLcert enabled

For each HOSTNAME that you want to be included in the certificate, run this command:

db hosts setprop $HOSTNAME letsencryptSSLcert enabled

Using the above example, one invocation of the command would look like this:

db hosts setprop www.domain1.com letsencryptSSLcert enabled

You can obtain a certificate for either of the following: all domains, all hostnames, or all domains AND hostnames. Only set one of the following.

config setprop letsencrypt configure domains
config setprop letsencrypt configure hosts
config setprop letsencrypt configure all

To use individually enabled hosts or domains leave the default none.

config setprop letsencrypt configure none


With the system configuration described above, setting this to "domains" will obtain a certificate covering domain1.com and domain2.com, but not www.domain1.com, etc. Setting it to "hosts" will obtain a certificate covering www.domain1.com, mail.domain1.com, ftp.domain1.com, etc., but not domain1.com or domain2.com. Setting this property to "all" will include all domain names and hostnames in the certificate. See NOTE before setting this to "all".

Enable test mode

After installing and configuring all the domains and hosts, the next step is to use test mode, which is enabled by default. This will obtain certificates from the staging server. The rate limits discussed in the introduction won't apply, so any errors or other issues won't prevent you from obtaining your production certificate. Enable test mode using this command:

config setprop letsencrypt status test
signal-event console-save

You can now run dehydrated for the first time, and make sure it's able to connect to the Let's Encrypt servers, validate the hostnames you're requesting, and issue certificates. To do this, run

dehydrated -c

If it prints only "# INFO: Using main config file /etc/dehydrated/config" and returns you to the shell prompt, see Bugzilla:10300.


Important.png Note:
Solution for error "Malformed account ID in KeyID header URL" using API 2, for contrib versions 0.6.13 or older See Bugzilla:10828 or update to latest contrib


If this runs without errors, try to connect to your server-manager page. You should see an error that the security certificate wasn't issued by a trusted certification authority; this is perfectly normal. However, there should be a certificate, it should include all the hostnames you wanted included, and it should be valid for the next ninety days. If this was successful, proceed to production.

Enable Production Mode

Once you've successfully tested your installation, set it to production mode using these commands:

config setprop letsencrypt status enabled
signal-event console-save

Then obtain a new certificate from the Let's Encrypt production server:

dehydrated -c -x

The -x flag here is needed to force dehydrated to obtain a new certificate, even though you have an existing certificate that's valid for more than 30 days.

If this command succeeded, congratulations! You've successfully obtained a valid, trusted TLS certificate, which will automatically renew itself in perpetuity.

Once you've obtained your certificate and configured your server, test your server with a tool like SSLLabs.com to make sure it's working properly.

Archive old certificates

A new function lets you cleanup old and archive old certificates.

dehydrated --cleanup (-gc)

Configuration properties

Key property default values
letsencrypt ACCEPT_TERMS empty, yes set to yes to accept terms of service, if left empty the contrib will not work.
API 2 1,2 deprecated, will always be v2, as v1 is deprecated as per june 2021
configure none none,all,domains,hosts this will change the default behaviour on non explicitly domains or hosts with "letsencryptSSLcert enabled". By default will not be used, if hosts is set will ask a cert for all hosts, if domains is set will ask a cert for all domains, if all is set, will ask for both domains and hosts. In all situation it will ask a cert for domains/hosts where "letsencryptSSLcert enabled" is set and it is not set to "letsencryptSSLcert disabled"
email email enter the email to create account and receive updates from Let's Encrypt
hookScript disabled enabled,disabled will trigger advanced hook script if enabled, even if disabled the part to signal-event ssl-update to propagate the cert will run.
hostOverride disabled yes,disabled default disabled, if disabled will only ask cert for hosts (if selected according to configure and "letsencryptSSLcert enabled") for hosts with type=Self. If set to yes will include any listed hosts whether remote or local.
keysize 4096 base 2 number length of your certificate's private key, if you don't want the default of 4096 bits. This should not be necessary in most cases, but if desired, use this command to do so:
status test enabled,disabled,test default status is disabled, First set it to test to connect to the test server of let's Encrypt to check if your server is well configured. After checking everything is ok, you can set it to enabled.

Troubleshooting

see Letsencrypt/Troubleshooting

Advanced Topics

see Letsencrypt/Advanced


Uninstall

yum remove smeserver-letsencrypt  letsencrypt

Bugs

Please raise bugs under the SME-Contribs section in bugzilla and select the smeserver-letsencrypt component or use this link


IDProductVersionStatusSummary (11 tasks)
12325SME Contribs10.0CONFIRMEDrenewal fails after domain deleted from manager.
11796SME ContribsFuturCONFIRMEDIs the dns-01 Challenge Supported or is it in planing?
11442SME Contribs10alphaCONFIRMEDmultiple fragments related to some other bugs
10920SME Contribs10alphaCONFIRMEDmove .well-known/acme-challenge out of the Primary ibay
10836SME Contribs9.2CONFIRMEDforce migration from acme-v1 to acme-v2
10818SME Contribs9.2CONFIRMEDtemplate does not respect domain-deleted
10656SME Contribs9.2CONFIRMEDNo letsencrypt certificate for Internet enable password protected Ibay
10483SME Contribs9.2CONFIRMEDrenewal fails with ibay using password
10462SME ContribsFuturCONFIRMEDNFR: implement per certificate / domain
10280SME Contribs9.2CONFIRMEDadd test for domain and host to disable the one at least defined in publicly available dns
9196SME Contribs10.0CONFIRMEDServer manager panel for the letsencrypt

Changelog

Only released version in smecontrib are listed here.

smeserver-letsencrypt Changelog: SME 10 (smeaddons)
2022/07/30 Brian Read 0.5-24.sme
- Re-build and link to latest devtools [SME: 11997]
2022/07/25 Jean-Philippe Pialasse 0.5-23.sme
- add to core backup [SME: 12011]
2022/06/15 Brian Read 0.5-22.sme
- Add action to check if dehydrated.timer is running and stop it if so [SME: 11996]
2022/06/12 Brian Read 0.5-21.sme
- Stop systemd timer runnning as well as cron [SME: 11990]
2022/03/23 Jean-Philippe Pialasse 0.5-19.sme
- use a general Alias for acme path and a proxypass [SME: 10637]