Files
dehydrated/README.md
Lukas Schauer 92a822e0b8 updated readme
2016-01-08 19:59:43 +01:00

100 lines
3.7 KiB
Markdown

# letsencrypt.sh [![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/lukas2511/letsencrypt.sh.svg?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/lukas2511/letsencrypt.sh)
This is a client for signing certificates with an ACME-server (currently only provided by letsencrypt) implemented as a relatively simple bash-script.
It uses the `openssl` utility for everything related to actually handling keys and certificates, so you need to have that installed.
Other dependencies are (for now): curl, sed
Perl no longer is a dependency.
The only remaining perl code in this repository is the script you can use to convert your existing letsencrypt-keyfile into something openssl (and this script) can read.
Current features:
- Signing of a list of domains
- Renewal if a certificate is about to expire
- Certificate revocation
Please keep in mind that this software and even the acme-protocol are relatively young and may still have some unresolved issues.
Feel free to report any issues you find with this script or contribute by submitting a pullrequest.
## Usage:
```text
Usage: ./letsencrypt.sh [-h] [command [argument]] [parameter [argument]] [parameter [argument]] ...
Default command: help
Commands:
--cron (-c) Sign/renew non-existant/changed/expiring certificates.
--revoke (-r) path/to/cert.pem Revoke specified certificate
--help (-h) Show help text
--env (-e) Output configuration variables for use in other scripts
Parameters:
--domain (-d) domain.tld Use specified domain name(s) instead of domains.txt entry (one certificate!)
--force (-x) Force renew of certificate even if it is longer valid than value in RENEW_DAYS
--privkey (-p) path/to/key.pem Use specified private key instead of account key (useful for revocation)
--config (-f) path/to/config.sh Use specified config file
```
### domains.txt
The file `domains.txt` should have the following format:
```text
example.com www.example.com
example.net www.example.net wiki.example.net
```
This states that there should be two certificates `example.com` and `example.net`,
with the other domains in the corresponding line being their alternative names.
### $WELLKNOWN / challenge-response
Boulder (acme-server) is looking for challenge responses under your domain in the `.well-known/acme-challenge` directory
This script uses `http-01`-type verification (for now) so you need to have that directory available over normal http (no ssl).
A full URL would look like `http://example.org/.well-known/acme-challenge/c3VjaC1jaGFsbGVuZ2UtbXVjaA-aW52YWxpZC13b3c`.
An example setup to get this to work would be:
nginx.conf:
```
...
location /.well-known/acme-challenge {
alias /var/www/letsencrypt;
}
...
```
config.sh:
```bash
...
WELLKNOWN="/var/www/letsencrypt"
...
```
An alternative to setting the WELLKNOWN variable would be to create a symlink to the default location next to the script (or BASEDIR):
`ln -s /var/www/letsencrypt .acme-challenges`
## Import
### import-account.pl
This perl-script can be used to import the account key from the original letsencrypt client.
You should copy `private_key.json` to the same directory as the script.
The json-file can be found in a subdirectory of `/etc/letsencrypt/accounts/acme-v01.api.letsencrypt.org/directory`.
Usage: `./import-account.pl`
### import-certs.sh
This script can be used to import private keys and certificates created by the original letsencrypt client.
By default it expects the certificates to be found under `/etc/letsencrypt`, which is the default output directory of the original client.
You can change the path by setting LETSENCRYPT in your config file: ```LETSENCRYPT="/etc/letsencrypt"```.
Usage: `./import-certs.sh`