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acertmgr/README.md

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ACERTMGR
========
This is an automated certificate manager using ACME/letsencrypt.
Running ACERTMGR
----------------
The main file acertmgr.py is intended to be run regularly (e.g. as daily cron job) as root.
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Requirements
------------
* Python (2.7+ and 3.3+ should work)
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* cryptography
Optional packages
-----------------
* PyYAML (when using config files in YAML format)
* dnspython (required for the dns.nsupdate mode)
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Initial Setup
-------------
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You should decide which challenge mode you want to use with acertmgr:
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* webdir: In this mode, challenges are put into a directory, and served by an existing webserver
* standalone: In this mode, challenges are completed by acertmgr directly.
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This starts a webserver to solve the challenges, which can be used standalone or together with an existing webserver that forwards request to a specified local port
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* webdir/standalone: Make sure that the `webdir` directory exists in both cases (Note: the standalone webserver does not yet serve the files in situation)
* dns.*: This mode puts the challenge into a TXT record for the domain (usually _acme-challenge.<domain>) where it will be parsed from by the authority
* dns.* (Alias mode): Can be used similar to the above but allows redirection of _acme-challenge.<domain> to any other (updatable domain) defined in dns_updatedomain via CNAME (e.g. _acme-challenge.example.net IN CNAME bla.foo.bar with config dns_updatedomain="bla.foo.bar" in config)
* dns.nsupdate: Updates the TXT record using RFC2136 (with dnspython)
You can optionally provide the key files for the ACME protocol, if you do not they will be automatically created:
* The account key is expected at `/etc/acme/account.key`
* The domain key is expected at `/etc/acme/server.key` (Note: only one domain key is required for all domains used in the same instance of acertmgr)
* If you are missing these keys, they will be created for you or you can create them using `openssl genrsa 4096 > /etc/acme/account.key` and `openssl genrsa 4096 > /etc/acme/server.key` respectively
* Do not forget to set proper permissions of the keys using `chmod 0400 /etc/acme/*.key`
Finally, you need to setup the configuration files, as shown in the next section.
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While testing, you can use the acme-staging authority instead, in order to avoid issuing too many certificates.
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Configuration
-------------
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The main configuration is read from `/etc/acme/acme.conf`, domains for which certificates should be obtained/renewed should be configured in `/etc/acme/domains.d/*.conf`.
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All configuration files can use yaml (requires PyYAML) or json syntax.
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* Example global configuration file (YAML syntax):
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```yaml
---
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# Required: Authority API endpoint to use
authority: "https://acme-v01.api.letsencrypt.org"
#authority: "https://acme-staging.api.letsencrypt.org"
# Optional: account_key location. This defaults to "/etc/acme/account.key"
account_key: "/etc/acme/acc.key"
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# Optional: global server_key location. Otherwise separate key per server
#server_key: "/etc/acme/serv.key"
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# Optional: global challenge handling mode with parameters
#mode: webdir
#webdir: /var/www/acme-challenge/
#mode: standalone
#port: 13135
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```
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* Example domain configuration file (YAML syntax):
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```yaml
---
mail.example.com:
- path: /etc/postfix/ssl/mail.key
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user: root
group: root
perm: '400'
format: key
action: '/etc/init.d/postfix reload'
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- path: /etc/postfix/ssl/mail.crt
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user: root
group: root
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perm: '400'
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format: crt,ca
action: '/etc/init.d/postfix reload'
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jabber.example.com:
- path: /etc/ejabberd/server.pem
user: jabber
group: jabber
perm: '400'
format: key,crt,ca
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action: '/etc/init.d/ejabberd restart'
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# this will create a certificate with subject alternative names
www.example.com example.com:
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- path: /var/www/ssl/cert.pem
user: apache
group: apache
perm: '400'
action: '/etc/init.d/apache2 reload'
format: crt,ca
- path: /var/www/ssl/key.pem
user: apache
group: apache
perm: '400'
action: '/etc/init.d/apache2 reload'
format: key
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# this will create a certificate with subject alternative names
# using a different challenge handler for one domain
mail.example.com smtp.example.com webmail.example.net:
- mode: dns.nsupdate
nsupdate_server: ns1.example.com
nsupdate_keyname: mail
nsupdate_keyvalue: Test1234512359==
- domain: webmail.example.net
mode: dns.nsupdate
nsupdate_server: ns1.example.net
nsupdate_keyname: webmail.
nsupdate_keyfile: /etc/nsupdate.key
dns_updatedomain: webmail.example.net
- path: /etc/postfix/ssl/mail.key
user: root
group: root
perm: '400'
format: key
action: '/etc/init.d/postfix reload'
- path: /etc/postfix/ssl/mail.crt
user: root
group: root
perm: '400'
format: crt,ca
action: '/etc/init.d/postfix reload'
```
* Example global configuration file (JSON syntax):
```json
---
{
"mode": "standalone",
"port": "80",
"account_key": "/etc/acme/acc.key",
"server_key": "/etc/acme/serv.key",
"webdir": "/var/www/acme-challenge/",
"authority": "https://acme-v01.api.letsencrypt.org",
"defaults":
{
"cafile": "/etc/acme/lets-encrypt-x3-cross-signed.pem"
}
}
```
* Example domain configuration file (JSON syntax):
```json
---
{
"mail.example.com": [
{ "path": "/etc/postfix/ssl/mail.key",
"user": "root",
"group": "root",
"perm": "400",
"format": "key",
"action": "/etc/init.d/postfix reload" },
{ "path": "/etc/postfix/ssl/mail.crt",
"user": "root",
"group": "root",
"perm": "400",
"format": "crt,ca",
"action": "/etc/init.d/postfix reload" }
],
"jabber.example.com": [
{ "path": "/etc/ejabberd/server.pem",
"user": "jabber",
"group": "jabber",
"perm": "400",
"format": "key,crt,ca",
"action": "/etc/init.d/ejabberd restart" }
],
"www.example.com example.com": [
{ "path": "/var/www/ssl/cert.pem",
"user": "apache",
"group": "apache",
"perm": "400",
"action": "/etc/init.d/apache2 reload",
"format": "crt,ca" },
{ "path": "/var/www/ssl/key.pem",
"user": "apache",
"group": "apache",
"perm": "400",
"action": "/etc/init.d/apache2 reload",
"format": "key" }
]
}
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```
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Security
--------
Please keep the following in mind when using this software:
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* DO read the source code, since it has to be run as root
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* Make sure that your configuration files are NOT writable by other users - arbitrary commands can be executed after updating certificates