Creates certificates and manages renewal using the letsencrypt service.
Table of Contents
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file and/or git tag
,
which contains the currently released version. This formula is versioned according to Semantic Versioning.
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file and/or Special notes section.
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None
This is a shortcut for letsencrypt.install letsencrypt.config and letsencrypt.domains.
If use_package is True (the default), the formula will try to install the certbot package from your Distro's repo. Keep in mind that most distros don't have a package available by default: Ie, previous stable Debian (Stretch) requires a backports repo installed. Centos 7 requires EPEL, etc. This formula DOES NOT manage these repositories. Use the apt-formula or the epel-formula to manage them.
If use_package is False it installs and configures the letsencrypt cli from git, creates the requested certificates and installs renewal cron job.
** WARNING ** If you set use_package to True, it will:
- Delete all certbot's crons if they exist from a previous git-based installation (as the package uses a systemd's timer unit to renew all the certs)
- Delete git-based installation's scripts (usually installed under /usr/local/bin) if they still exist declared in letsencrypt's pillar.
- As a safety measure, if there's an /opt/letsencrypt directory from a git-based installation, it will be left untouched, but unused.
To check dependencies to use the package for your distro, check https://certbot.eff.org/all-instructions.
Only installs the letsencrypt client (see above).
Manages /etc/letsencrypt/cli.ini config file.
Creates a certificate with the domains in each domain set (letsencrypt:domainsets in pillar). Letsencrypt uses a relatively short validity of 90 days. Therefore, a cron job for automatic renewal every 60 days is installed for each domain set as well.
Linux testing is done with kitchen-salt
.
- Ruby
- Docker
$ gem install bundler
$ bundle install
$ bin/kitchen test [platform]
Where [platform]
is the platform name defined in kitchen.yml
,
e.g. debian-9-2019-2-py3
.
Creates the docker instance and runs the template
main state, ready for testing.
Runs the inspec
tests on the actual instance.
Removes the docker instance.
Runs all of the stages above in one go: i.e. destroy
+ converge
+ verify
+ destroy
.
Gives you SSH access to the instance for manual testing.