ACME-complient Go client library and a command line tool. Neither has 3rd party dependencies. Also, see https://letsencrypt.org.
Contents of this repo:
/
- ACME client Go package. See godoc for acme package. The package has been imported to golang.org/x/crypto/acme/internal/acme. I will keep github.com/google/acme package mirroring crypto/acme/internal/acme until it becomes exported asgolang.org/x/crypto/acme
./cmd/acme/
- cli tool, similar to the officialletsencrypt
.
This package is a work in progress and makes no API stability promises.
Quick install with go get -u github.com/google/acme/cmd/acme
.
- You need to have a user account, registered with the CA. This is represented by an RSA private key.
The easiest is to let acme
tool generate it for you:
acme reg mailto:[email protected]
If you already have a key or want to generate one manually:
mkdir -p ~/config/acme
openssl genrsa -out ~/config/acme/account.pem 2048
acme reg mailto:[email protected]
The latter version assumes that default acme
config dir is ~/config/acme
.
Yours may vary. Check with acme help reg
.
The "mailto:[email protected]" in the example above is a contact argument. While some ACME CA may let you register without providing any contact info, it is recommended to use one. For instance a CA might need to notify cert owners with an update.
- Agree with the ACME CA Terms of Service.
Before requesting your first certificate, you may need to agree with the terms of the CA. You can check the status of our account with:
acme whoami
and look for "Accepted: ..." line. If it says "no", check CA's terms document provided as a link in "Terms: ..." field and agree by executing:
acme update -update
- Request a new certificate for your domain.
The easiest way to do this is:
acme cert example.com
The above command will generate a new certificate key (unless one already exists),
and send a certifcate request. The location of the output files is ~/.config.acme
,
but depends on your environment. Check with acme help cert
.
If you don't want auto-generated cert key, one can always be generated upfront:
openssl genrsa -out cert.key 2048
in which case the cert command will look something like this:
acme cert -k cert.key example.com
Note that for certificate request command to succeed, it needs to be executed in a way allowing for resolving authorization challenges (domain ownership proof). This typically means the command should be executed on the same host the domain is served from.
If the latter is not possible, use -manual
flag and follow the instructions:
acme cert -manual example.com
(c) Google, 2015. Licensed under Apache-2 license.