20 KiB
User Guide
Table of Contents
Installation
letsencrypt-auto
letsencrypt-auto is a wrapper which installs some
dependencies from your OS standard package repositories (e.g. using
apt-get or yum), and for other dependencies it sets up a
virtualized Python environment with packages downloaded from PyPI1. It also provides automated
updates.
To install and run the client, just type...
./letsencrypt-auto
Hint
During the beta phase, Let's Encrypt enforces strict rate limits on the number of certificates issued for one domain. It is recommended to initially use the test server via --test-cert until you get the desired certificates.
Throughout the documentation, whenever you see references to
letsencrypt script/binary, you can substitute in
letsencrypt-auto. For example, to get basic help you would
type:
./letsencrypt-auto --help
or for full help, type:
./letsencrypt-auto --help all
letsencrypt-auto is the recommended method of running
the Let's Encrypt client beta releases on systems that don't have a
packaged version. Debian, Arch Linux, Gentoo, FreeBSD, and OpenBSD now
have native packages, so on those systems you can just install
letsencrypt (and perhaps letsencrypt-apache).
If you'd like to run the latest copy from Git, or run your own locally
modified copy of the client, follow the instructions in the contributing. Some other methods of installation
are discussed below.
Plugins
The Let's Encrypt client supports a number of different "plugins" that can be used to obtain and/or install certificates. Plugins that can obtain a cert are called "authenticators" and can be used with the "certonly" command. Plugins that can install a cert are called "installers". Plugins that do both can be used with the "letsencrypt run" command, which is the default.
| Plugin | Auth | Inst | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| apache | Y | Y | Automates obtaining and installing a cert with Apache 2.4 on
Debian-based distributions with libaugeas0 1.0+. |
| webroot | Y | N | Obtains a cert by writing to the webroot directory of an already running webserver. |
| standalone | Y | N | Uses a "standalone" webserver to obtain a cert. Requires port 80 or 443 to be available. This is useful on systems with no webserver, or when direct integration with the local webserver is not supported or not desired. |
| manual | Y | N | Helps you obtain a cert by giving you instructions to perform domain validation yourself. |
| nginx | Y | Y | Very experimental and not included in letsencrypt-auto. |
There are also a number of third-party plugins for the client, provided by other developers:
| Plugin | Auth | Inst | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| plesk | Y | Y | Integration with the Plesk web hosting tool |
| haproxy | Y | Y | Integration with the HAProxy load balancer |
| s3front | Y | Y | Integration with Amazon CloudFront distribution of S3 buckets |
| gandi | Y | Y | Integration with Gandi's hosting products and API |
Future plugins for IMAP servers, SMTP servers, IRC servers, etc, are likely to be installers but not authenticators.
Apache
If you're running Apache 2.4 on a Debian-based OS with version 1.0+
of the libaugeas0 package available, you can use the Apache
plugin. This automates both obtaining and installing certs on
an Apache webserver. To specify this plugin on the command line, simply
include --apache.
Webroot
If you're running a local webserver for which you have the ability to
modify the content being served, and you'd prefer not to stop the
webserver during the certificate issuance process, you can use the
webroot plugin to obtain a cert by including certonly and
--webroot on the command line. In addition, you'll need to
specify --webroot-path or -w with the
top-level directory ("web root") containing the files served by your
webserver. For example, --webroot-path /var/www/html or
--webroot-path /usr/share/nginx/html are two common webroot
paths.
If you're getting a certificate for many domains at once, the plugin
needs to know where each domain's files are served from, which could
potentially be a separate directory for each domain. When requested a
certificate for multiple domains, each domain will use the most recently
specified --webroot-path. So, for instance,
letsencrypt certonly --webroot -w /var/www/example/ -d www.example.com -d example.com -w /var/www/other -d other.example.net -d another.other.example.net
would obtain a single certificate for all of those names, using the
/var/www/example webroot directory for the first two, and
/var/www/other for the second two.
The webroot plugin works by creating a temporary file for each of
your requested domains in
${webroot-path}/.well-known/acme-challenge. Then the Let's
Encrypt validation server makes HTTP requests to validate that the DNS
for each requested domain resolves to the server running letsencrypt. An
example request made to your web server would look like:
66.133.109.36 - - [05/Jan/2016:20:11:24 -0500] "GET /.well-known/acme-challenge/HGr8U1IeTW4kY_Z6UIyaakzOkyQgPr_7ArlLgtZE8SX HTTP/1.1" 200 87 "-" "Mozilla/5.0 (compatible; Let's Encrypt validation server; +https://www.letsencrypt.org)"
Note that to use the webroot plugin, your server must be configured
to serve files from hidden directories. If /.well-known is
treated specially by your webserver configuration, you might need to
modify the configuration to ensure that files inside
/.well-known/acme-challenge are served by the
webserver.
Standalone
To obtain a cert using a "standalone" webserver, you can use the
standalone plugin by including certonly and
--standalone on the command line. This plugin needs to bind
to port 80 or 443 in order to perform domain validation, so you may need
to stop your existing webserver. To control which port the plugin uses,
include one of the options shown below on the command line.
--standalone-supported-challenges http-01to use port 80--standalone-supported-challenges tls-sni-01to use port 443
The standalone plugin does not rely on any other server software running on the machine where you obtain the certificate. It must still be possible for that machine to accept inbound connections from the Internet on the specified port using each requested domain name.
Manual
If you'd like to obtain a cert running letsencrypt on a
machine other than your target webserver or perform the steps for domain
validation yourself, you can use the manual plugin. While hidden from
the UI, you can use the plugin to obtain a cert by specifying
certonly and --manual on the command line.
This requires you to copy and paste commands into another terminal
session, which may be on a different computer.
Nginx
In the future, if you're running Nginx you can use this plugin to
automatically obtain and install your certificate. The Nginx plugin is
still experimental, however, and is not installed with letsencrypt-auto. If installed, you can
select this plugin on the command line by including
--nginx.
Third-party plugins
These plugins are listed at https://github.com/letsencrypt/letsencrypt/wiki/Plugins.
If you're interested, you can also write your own plugin <dev-plugin>.
Renewal
Note
Let's Encrypt CA issues short-lived certificates (90 days). Make sure you renew the certificates at least once in 3 months.
The letsencrypt client now supports a renew
action to check all installed certificates for impending expiry and
attempt to renew them. The simplest form is simply
letsencrypt renew
This will attempt to renew any previously-obtained certificates that expire in less than 30 days. The same plugin and options that were used at the time the certificate was originally issued will be used for the renewal attempt, unless you specify other plugins or options.
If you're sure that this command executes successfully without human
intervention, you can add the command to crontab (since
certificates are only renewed when they're determined to be near expiry,
the command can run on a regular basis, like every week or every day);
note that the current version provides detailed output describing either
renewal success or failure.
The --force-renew flag may be helpful for automating
renewal; it causes the expiration time of the certificate(s) to be
ignored when considering renewal, and attempts to renew each and every
installed certificate regardless of its age. (This form is not
appropriate to run daily because each certificate will be renewed every
day, which will quickly run into the certificate authority rate
limit.)
Note that options provided to letsencrypt renew will
apply to every certificate for which renewal is attempted; for
example, letsencrypt renew --rsa-key-size 4096 would try to
replace every near-expiry certificate with an equivalent certificate
using a 4096-bit RSA public key. If a certificate is successfully
renewed using specified options, those options will be saved and used
for future renewals of that certificate.
An alternative form that provides for more fine-grained control over
the renewal process (while renewing specified certificates one at a
time), is letsencrypt certonly with the complete set of
subject domains of a specific certificate specified via -d flags, like
letsencrypt certonly -d example.com -d www.example.com
(All of the domains covered by the certificate must be specified in
this case in order to renew and replace the old certificate rather than
obtaining a new one; don't forget any www. domains! Specifying a subset of the
domains creates a new, separate certificate containing only those
domains, rather than replacing the original certificate.) The
certonly form attempts to renew one individual
certificate.
Please note that the CA will send notification emails to the address you provide if you do not renew certificates that are about to expire.
Let's Encrypt is working hard on improving the renewal process, and we apologize for any inconveniences you encounter in integrating these commands into your individual environment.
Where are my certificates?
First of all, we encourage you to use Apache or nginx installers, both which perform the certificate management automatically. If, however, you prefer to manage everything by hand, this section provides information on where to find necessary files.
All generated keys and issued certificates can be found in
/etc/letsencrypt/live/$domain. Rather than copying, please
point your (web) server configuration directly to those files (or create
symlinks). During the renewal,
/etc/letsencrypt/live is updated with the latest necessary
files.
Note
/etc/letsencrypt/archive and
/etc/letsencrypt/keys contain all previous keys and
certificates, while /etc/letsencrypt/live symlinks to the
latest versions.
The following files are available:
privkey.pem-
Private key for the certificate.
Warning
This must be kept secret at all times! Never share it with anyone, including Let's Encrypt developers. You cannot put it into a safe, however - your server still needs to access this file in order for SSL/TLS to work.
This is what Apache needs for SSLCertificateKeyFile, and nginx for ssl_certificate_key.
cert.pem-
Server certificate only.
This is what Apache < 2.4.8 needs for SSLCertificateFile.
chain.pem-
All certificates that need to be served by the browser excluding server certificate, i.e. root and intermediate certificates only.
This is what Apache < 2.4.8 needs for SSLCertificateChainFile, and what nginx >= 1.3.7 needs for ssl_trusted_certificate.
fullchain.pem-
All certificates, including server certificate. This is concatenation of
cert.pemandchain.pem.This is what Apache >= 2.4.8 needs for SSLCertificateFile, and what nginx needs for ssl_certificate.
For both chain files, all certificates are ordered from root (primary certificate) towards leaf.
Please note, that you must use either
chain.pem or fullchain.pem. In case of
webservers, using only cert.pem, will cause nasty errors
served through the browsers!
Note
All files are PEM-encoded (as the filename suffix suggests). If you
need other format, such as DER or PFX, then you could convert using
openssl, but this means you will not benefit from automatic
renewal!
Configuration file
It is possible to specify configuration file with
letsencrypt-auto --config cli.ini (or shorter
-c cli.ini). An example configuration file is shown
below:
By default, the following locations are searched:
/etc/letsencrypt/cli.ini$XDG_CONFIG_HOME/letsencrypt/cli.ini(or~/.config/letsencrypt/cli.iniif$XDG_CONFIG_HOMEis not set).
Getting help
If you're having problems you can chat with us on IRC (#letsencrypt @ Freenode) or get support on our forums.
If you find a bug in the software, please do report it in our issue tracker. Remember to give us as much information as possible:
- copy and paste exact command line used and the output (though mind that the latter might include some personally identifiable information, including your email and domains)
- copy and paste logs from
/var/log/letsencrypt(though mind they also might contain personally identifiable information) - copy and paste
letsencrypt --versionoutput - your operating system, including specific version
- specify which installation method you've chosen
Other methods of installation
Running with Docker
Docker is an amazingly simple and quick way to obtain a certificate. However, this mode of operation is unable to install certificates or configure your webserver, because our installer plugins cannot reach it from inside the Docker container.
You should definitely read the where-certs section, in order to know how to manage
the certs manually. https://github.com/letsencrypt/letsencrypt/wiki/Ciphersuite-guidance
provides some information about recommended ciphersuites. If none of
these make much sense to you, you should definitely use the letsencrypt-auto method, which enables you
to use installer plugins that cover both of those hard topics.
If you're still not convinced and have decided to use this method, from the server that the domain you're requesting a cert for resolves to, install Docker, then issue the following command:
sudo docker run -it --rm -p 443:443 -p 80:80 --name letsencrypt \
-v "/etc/letsencrypt:/etc/letsencrypt" \
-v "/var/lib/letsencrypt:/var/lib/letsencrypt" \
quay.io/letsencrypt/letsencrypt:latest auth
and follow the instructions (note that auth command is
explicitly used - no installer plugins involved). Your new cert will be
available in /etc/letsencrypt/live on the host.
Operating System Packages
FreeBSD
- Port:
cd /usr/ports/security/py-letsencrypt && make install clean- Package:
pkg install py27-letsencrypt
OpenBSD
- Port:
cd /usr/ports/security/letsencrypt/client && make install clean- Package:
pkg_add letsencrypt
Arch Linux
sudo pacman -S letsencrypt letsencrypt-apache
Debian
If you run Debian Stretch or Debian Sid, you can install letsencrypt packages.
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install letsencrypt python-letsencrypt-apache
If you don't want to use the Apache plugin, you can omit the
python-letsencrypt-apache package.
Packages for Debian Jessie are coming in the next few weeks.
Fedora
sudo dnf install letsencrypt
Gentoo
The official Let's Encrypt client is available in Gentoo Portage. If you want to use the Apache plugin, it has to be installed separately:
emerge -av app-crypt/letsencrypt
emerge -av app-crypt/letsencrypt-apache
Currently, only the Apache plugin is included in Portage. However, if you want the nginx plugin, you can use Layman to add the mrueg overlay which does include the nginx plugin package:
emerge -av app-portage/layman
layman -S
layman -a mrueg
emerge -av app-crypt/letsencrypt-nginx
When using the Apache plugin, you will run into a "cannot find a cert
or key directive" error if you're sporting the default Gentoo
httpd.conf. You can fix this by commenting out two lines in
/etc/apache2/httpd.conf as follows:
Change
<IfDefine SSL>
LoadModule ssl_module modules/mod_ssl.so
</IfDefine>
to
#<IfDefine SSL>
LoadModule ssl_module modules/mod_ssl.so
#</IfDefine>
For the time being, this is the only way for the Apache plugin to recognise the appropriate directives when installing the certificate. Note: this change is not required for the other plugins.
Other Operating Systems
OS packaging is an ongoing effort. If you'd like to package Let's
Encrypt client for your distribution of choice please have a look at the
packaging.
From source
Installation from source is only supported for developers and the
whole process is described in the contributing.
Warning
Please do not use
python setup.py install or
python pip install .. Please do not
attempt the installation commands as superuser/root and/or without
virtual environment, e.g. sudo python setup.py install,
sudo pip install, sudo ./venv/bin/.... These
modes of operation might corrupt your operating system and are
not supported by the Let's Encrypt team!
Comparison of different methods
Unless you have a very specific requirements, we kindly ask you to use the letsencrypt-auto method. It's the fastest, the most thoroughly tested and the most reliable way of getting our software and the free SSL certificates!
Beyond the methods discussed here, other methods may be possible, such as installing Let's Encrypt directly with pip from PyPI or downloading a ZIP archive from GitHub may be technically possible but are not presently recommended or supported.
Footnotes
By using this virtualized Python environment (virtualenv) we don't pollute the main OS space with packages from PyPI!↩︎