9.4 KiB
Let's Encrypt / ACME
NOTE on CAA: Please ensure that your DNS provider answers correctly to CAA record requests. If your DNS provider answer with an error, Let's Encrypt won't issue a certificate for your domain. Let's Encrypt do not require that you set a CAA record on your domain, just that your DNS provider answers correctly.
NOTE on IPv6: If the domain or sub domain you want to issue certificate for has an AAAA record set, Let's Encrypt will favor challenge validation over IPv6. There is an IPv6 to IPv4 fallback in place but Let's Encrypt can't guarantee it'll work in every possible case, so bottom line is if you are not sure of both your host and your host's Docker reachability over IPv6, do not advertise an AAAA record or LE challenge validation might fail.
As described on basic usage, the LETSENCRYPT_HOST
environment variables needs to be declared in each to-be-proxied application containers for which you want to enable SSL and create certificate. It most likely needs to be the same as the VIRTUAL_HOST
variable and must resolve to your host (which has to be publicly reachable).
The following environment variables are optional and parametrize the way the Let's Encrypt client works.
per proxyed container
DNS-01 ACME challenge
In order to switch to the DNS-01 ACME challenge, set the ACME_CHALLENGE
environment variable to DNS-01
on your proxied container. This will also require you to set the ACMESH_DNS_API_CONFIG
environment variable to a JSON or YAML string containing the configuration for the DNS provider you are using. Inside the JSON or YAML string, the DNS_API
property is always required and should be set to the name of the acme.sh DNS API you want to use.
The other properties required will depend on the DNS provider you are using. For more information on the required properties for each DNS provider, please refer to the acme.sh documentation (please keep in mind that nginxproxy/acme-companion is using a fixed version of acme.sh, so the documentation might include DNS providers that are not yet available in the version used by this image).
Example using the Gandi Live DNS API:
docker run --detach \
--name your-proxyed-app \
--env "VIRTUAL_HOST=yourdomain.tld" \
--env "LETSENCRYPT_HOST=yourdomain.tld" \
--env "ACME_CHALLENGE=DNS-01" \
--env "ACMESH_DNS_API_CONFIG={'DNS_API': 'dns_gandi_livedns', 'GANDI_LIVEDNS_KEY': 'yourApiKey'}" \
nginx
Same example on a Docker compose file:
services:
# [...]
app:
image: nginx
container_name: your-proxyed-app
environment:
VIRTUAL_HOST: yourdomain.tld
LETSENCRYPT_HOST: yourdomain.tld
ACME_CHALLENGE: DNS-01
ACMESH_DNS_API_CONFIG: |-
DNS_API: dns_gandi_livedns
GANDI_LIVEDNS_KEY: yourApiKey
If you experience issues with the DNS-01 ACME challenge, please try to get it working outside of the container before opening an issue. If you can't get it working outside of the container, please seek support on the acme.sh repository.
Multi-domains certificates
Specify multiple hosts with a comma delimiter to create multi-domains (SAN) certificates (the first domain in the list will be the base domain).
Example:
$ docker run --detach \
--name your-proxyed-app \
--env "VIRTUAL_HOST=yourdomain.tld,www.yourdomain.tld,anotherdomain.tld" \
--env "LETSENCRYPT_HOST=yourdomain.tld,www.yourdomain.tld,anotherdomain.tld" \
nginx
Let's Encrypt has a limit of 100 domains per certificate, while Buypass limit is 15 domains per certificate.
Separate certificate for each domain
The example above will issue a single domain certificate for all the domains listed in the LETSENCRYPT_HOST
environment variable. If you need to have a separate certificate for each of the domains, you can add set the LETSENCRYPT_SINGLE_DOMAIN_CERTS
environment variable to true
.
Example:
$ docker run --detach \
--name your-proxyed-app \
--env "VIRTUAL_HOST=yourdomain.tld,www.yourdomain.tld,anotherdomain.tld" \
--env "LETSENCRYPT_HOST=yourdomain.tld,www.yourdomain.tld,anotherdomain.tld" \
--env "LETSENCRYPT_SINGLE_DOMAIN_CERTS=true" \
nginx
Automatic certificate renewal
Every hour (3600 seconds) the certificates are checked and per default every certificate that have been issued at least 60 days ago is renewed. For Let's Encrypt certificates, that mean they will be renewed 30 days before expiration.
Contact address
The LETSENCRYPT_EMAIL
environment variable must be a valid email and will be used by Let's Encrypt to warn you of impeding certificate expiration (should the automated renewal fail) and to recover an account.
Private key size
The LETSENCRYPT_KEYSIZE
environment variable determines the type and size of the requested key. Supported values are 2048
, 3072
and 4096
for RSA keys, and ec-256
or ec-384
for elliptic curve keys. The default is RSA 4096.
To change the global default set the DEFAULT_KEY_SIZE
environment variable on the acme-companion container to one of the supported values specified above.
OCSP stapling
The ACME_OCSP
environment variable, when set to true
on a proxied application container, will add the OCSP Must-Staple extension to the issued certificate. Please read about OCSP Must-Staple support in Nginx if you intend to use this feature (https://trac.nginx.org/nginx/ticket/812 and https://trac.nginx.org/nginx/ticket/1830)
Test certificates
The LETSENCRYPT_TEST
environment variable, when set to true
on a proxied application container, will create a test certificates that don't have the 5 certs/week/domain limits and are signed by an untrusted intermediate (they won't be trusted by browsers).
If you want to do this globally for all containers, set ACME_CA_URI
on the acme-companion container as described in Container configuration.
ACME CA URI
The ACME_CA_URI
environment variable is used to set the ACME API endpoint from which the container's certificate(s) will be requested (defaults to https://acme-v02.api.letsencrypt.org/directory
).
Preferred chain
If the ACME CA provides multiple cert chain, you can use the ACME_PREFERRED_CHAIN
environment variable to select one. See acme.sh --preferred-chain
documentation for more info.
Container restart on cert renewal
The LETSENCRYPT_RESTART_CONTAINER
environment variable, when set to true
on an application container, will restart this container whenever the corresponding cert (LETSENCRYPT_HOST
) is renewed. This is useful when certificates are directly used inside a container for other purposes than HTTPS (e.g. an FTPS server), to make sure those containers always use an up to date certificate.
Pre-Hook and Post-Hook
The ACME_PRE_HOOK
and ACME_POST_HOOK
let you use the acme.sh
Pre- and Post-Hooks feature to run commands respectively before and after the container's certificate has been issued. For more information see Pre- and Post-Hook
global (set on acme-companion container)
Default contact address
The DEFAULT_EMAIL
variable must be a valid email and, when set on the acme-companion container, will be used as a fallback when no email address is provided using proxyed container's LETSENCRYPT_EMAIL
environment variables. It is highly recommended to set this variable to a valid email address that you own.
Private key re-utilization
The RENEW_PRIVATE_KEYS
environment variable, when set to false
on the acme-companion container, will set acme.sh
to reuse previously generated private key instead of generating a new one at renewal for all domains.
Reusing private keys can help if you intend to use HPKP, but please note that HPKP has been deprecated by Google's Chrome and that it is therefore strongly discouraged to use it at all.
ACME accounts handling
- Use one
acme.sh
configuration directory (--config-home
) per account email address. - Each
acme.sh
configuration directory can hold several accounts on different ACME service providers. But only one per service provider. - The
default
configuration directory holds the configuration for empty account email address. - When in testing mode (
LETSENCRYPT_TEST=true
):- The container will use the special purpose
staging
configuration directory. - The directory URI is forced to The Let's Encrypt v2 staging one (
ACME_CA_URI
is ignored) - The account email address is forced empty (
DEFAULT_EMAIL
andLETSENCRYPT_EMAIL
are ignored)
- The container will use the special purpose