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README.md
| letsencrypt (library) | letsencrypt-cli | letsencrypt-express | letsencrypt-koa | letsencrypt-hapi |
letsencrypt
Automatic Let's Encrypt HTTPS / TLS / SSL Certificates for node.js
Free SLL with 90-day HTTPS / TLS Certificates
Are these the droids you're looking for?
This is a low-level library for implementing ACME / LetsEncrypt Clients, CLIs, system tools, and abstracting storage backends (file vs db, etc).
For express
, raw https
or spdy
, or restify
(same as raw https) see
letsencrypt-express.
For hapi
see letsencrypt-hapi.
For koa
or rill
see letsencrypt-koa.
For bash
, fish
, zsh
, cmd.exe
, PowerShell
see letsencrypt-cli.
Install
letsencrypt
requires at least two plugins:
one for managing certificate storage and the other for handling ACME challenges.
The default storage plugin is le-store-certbot
and the default challenge is le-challenge-fs
.
npm install --save letsencrypt@2.x
npm install --save le-store-certbot@2.x # default plugin for accounts, certificates, and keypairs
npm install --save le-challenge-fs@2.x # default plugin for challenge handlers
npm install --save le-acme-core@2.x # default plugin for ACME spec
npm install --save le-sni-auto@2.x # default plugin for SNICallback
Usage
It's very simple and easy to use, but also very complete and easy to extend and customize.
Overly Simplified Example
Against my better judgement I'm providing a terribly oversimplified example of how to use this library:
var le = require('letsencrypt').create({ server: 'staging' });
var opts = {
domains: ['example.com'], email: 'user@email.com', agreeTos: true
};
le.register(opts).then(function (certs) {
console.log(certs);
// privkey, cert, chain, expiresAt, issuedAt, subject, altnames
}, function (err) {
console.error(err);
});
You also need some sort of server to handle the acme challenge:
var app = express();
app.use('/', le.middleware());
Note: The webrootPath
string is a template.
Any occurance of :hostname
will be replaced
with the domain for which we are requested certificates.
Useful Example
The configuration consists of 3 components:
- Storage Backend (search npm for projects starting with 'le-store-')
- ACME Challenge Handlers (search npm for projects starting with 'le-challenge-')
- Letsencryt Config (this is all you)
'use strict';
var LE = require('letsencrypt');
var le;
// Storage Backend
var leStore = require('le-store-certbot').create({
configDir: '~/letsencrypt/etc' // or /etc/letsencrypt or wherever
, debug: false
});
// ACME Challenge Handlers
var leChallenge = require('le-challenge-fs').create({
webrootPath: '~/letsencrypt/var/' // or template string such as
, debug: false // '/srv/www/:hostname/.well-known/acme-challenge'
});
function leAgree(opts, agreeCb) {
// opts = { email, domains, tosUrl }
agreeCb(null, opts.tosUrl);
}
le = LE.create({
server: LE.stagingServerUrl // or LE.productionServerUrl
, store: leStore // handles saving of config, accounts, and certificates
, challenges: { 'http-01': leChallenge } // handles /.well-known/acme-challege keys and tokens
, challengeType: 'http-01' // default to this challenge type
, agreeToTerms: leAgree // hook to allow user to view and accept LE TOS
//, sni: require('le-sni-auto').create({}) // handles sni callback
, debug: false
});
// If using express you should use the middleware
// app.use('/', le.middleware());
//
// Otherwise you should see the test file for usage of this:
// le.challenges['http-01'].get(opts.domain, key, val, done)
// Check in-memory cache of certificates for the named domain
le.check({ domains: [ 'example.com' ] }).then(function (results) {
if (results) {
// we already have certificates
return;
}
// Register Certificate manually
le.register({
domains: ['example.com'] // CHANGE TO YOUR DOMAIN (list for SANS)
, email: 'user@email.com' // CHANGE TO YOUR EMAIL
, agreeTos: '' // set to tosUrl string (or true) to pre-approve (and skip agreeToTerms)
, rsaKeySize: 2048 // 2048 or higher
, challengeType: 'http-01' // http-01, tls-sni-01, or dns-01
}).then(function (results) {
console.log('success');
}, function (err) {
// Note: you must either use le.middleware() with express,
// manually use le.challenges['http-01'].get(opts, domain, key, val, done)
// or have a webserver running and responding
// to /.well-known/acme-challenge at `webrootPath`
console.error('[Error]: node-letsencrypt/examples/standalone');
console.error(err.stack);
});
});
Here's what results
looks like:
{ privkey: '' // PEM encoded private key
, cert: '' // PEM encoded cert
, chain: '' // PEM encoded intermediate cert
, issuedAt: 0 // notBefore date (in ms) parsed from cert
, expiresAt: 0 // notAfter date (in ms) parsed from cert
, subject: '' // example.com
, altnames: [] // example.com,www.example.com
}
API
The full end-user API is exposed in the example above and includes all relevant options.
le.register(opts)
le.check(opts)
Helper Functions
We do expose a few helper functions:
- LE.validDomain(hostname) // returns '' or the hostname string if it's a valid ascii or punycode domain name
TODO fetch domain tld list
Template Strings
The following variables will be tempalted in any strings passed to the options object:
~/
replaced withos.homedir()
i.e./Users/aj
:hostname
replaced with the first domain in the list i.e.example.com
Developer API
If you are developing an le-store-*
or le-challenge-*
plugin you need to be aware of
additional internal API expectations.
IMPORTANT:
Use v2.0.0
as your initial version - NOT v0.1.0 and NOT v1.0.0 and NOT v3.0.0.
This is to indicate that your module is compatible with v2.x of node-letsencrypt.
Since the public API for your module is defined by node-letsencrypt the major version should be kept in sync.
store implementation
See https://github.com/Daplie/le-store-SPEC
- getOptions()
- accounts.
- checkKeypair(opts, cb)
- check(opts, cb)
- setKeypair(opts, keypair, cb)
- set(opts, reg, cb)
- certificates.
- checkKeypair(opts, cb)
- check(opts, cb)
- setKeypair(opts, keypair, cb)
- set(opts, reg, cb)
challenge implementation
See https://github.com/Daplie/le-challenge-fs
.set(opts, domain, key, value, cb);
// opts will be saved with domain/key.get(opts, domain, key, cb);
// opts will be retrieved by domain/key.remove(opts, domain, key, cb);
// opts will be retrieved by domain/key
Change History
- v2.0.2 - Aug 9th 2016 update readme
- v2.0.1 - Aug 9th 2016
- major refactor
- simplified API
- modular pluigns
- knock out bugs
- v1.5.0 now using letiny-core v2.0.0 and rsa-compat
- v1.4.x I can't remember... but it's better!
- v1.1.0 Added letiny-core, removed node-letsencrypt-python
- v1.0.2 Works with node-letsencrypt-python
- v1.0.0 Thar be dragons
LICENSE
Dual-licensed MIT and Apache-2.0
See LICENSE