From 7155b9765422cc0bbd54824acdf6d5fa1836c2a2 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Thomas Lange Date: Sun, 20 May 2018 17:55:39 +0200 Subject: Remove the special emphasis of "RSA" because EC keys are working too --- readme.md | 10 +++++----- 1 file changed, 5 insertions(+), 5 deletions(-) (limited to 'readme.md') diff --git a/readme.md b/readme.md index c07d115..98b2d66 100644 --- a/readme.md +++ b/readme.md @@ -1,5 +1,5 @@ # PainlessLE: Let's Encrypt Certificate Issuing -Painless issuing a single [X.509 certificate](https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc5280) for a bunch of hostnames from the **Let's Encrypt** Certification Authority (CA) without having an HTTP server installed (or for those people who do not want to touch their HTTP web directories and place a specific file to accomplish the ACME challenge). PainlessLE assumes that there is already a manually created RSA private key which is used for the Certificate-Signing-Request (CSR) by OpenSSL. The location for the RSA private key is defined within the `"CONFIDENTIAL"` variable and the path should exist with the correct UNIX file permissions. +Painless issuing a single [X.509 certificate](https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc5280) for a bunch of hostnames from the **Let's Encrypt** Certification Authority (CA) without having an HTTP server installed (or for those people who do not want to touch their HTTP web directories and place a specific file to accomplish the ACME challenge). PainlessLE assumes that there is already a manually created private key which is used for the Certificate-Signing-Request (CSR) by OpenSSL. The location for the private key is defined within the `"CONFIDENTIAL"` variable and the path should exist with the correct UNIX file permissions. ## Requirements The [Certbot client](https://certbot.eff.org/) must be installed on your machine because PainlessLE uses this piece of software to communicate over the [ACME protocol](https://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-ietf-acme-acme-01) with the ACME endpoint of Let's Encrypt and runs the ACME challenge. There are no known further requirements for using PainlessLE on Debian GNU/Linux at this time. @@ -10,18 +10,18 @@ Change the `LETSENCRYPT_ENDPOINT` to the address of the ACME staging API for tes ## Arguments ### Required command-line options: -* `[-i]`: Contains a string with the directory path where the certificates should be installed. This directory should already contain a manually created RSA private key (filename can be overwritten by providing the `[-K]` option) for the Certificate-Signing-Request (CSR). It's always a good idea to handle the RSA private keys manually because you may use [HTTP Public-Key-Pinning (HPKP)](https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc7469) so that you must ensure, that the RSA private key does not change. +* `[-i]`: Contains a string with the directory path where the certificates should be installed. This directory should already contain a manually created private key (filename can be overwritten by providing the `[-K]` option) for the Certificate-Signing-Request (CSR). It's always a good idea to handle the private keys manually because you may use [HTTP Public-Key-Pinning (HPKP)](https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc7469) so that you must ensure, that the private key does not change. * `[-h]`: Contains a colon (`:`) separated string with the DNS hostnames to include within the certificate. The string must be formatted as follows, without containing colons anywhere except **between** the hostnames: `example.org:blog.example.org:shop.example.org` ### Additional command-line options: -* `[-K]`: Filename for the existing RSA private key relative to `[-i]` +* `[-K]`: Filename for the existing private key relative to `[-i]` * `[-I]`: Target filename for the intermediate certificate relative to `[-i]` * `[-C]`: Target filename for the certificate only file relative to `[-i]` * `[-F]`: Target filename for the certificate full fiĺe relative to `[-i]` ## Example -Lets assume that you want to get a single X.509 certificate from the Let's Encrypt CA which includes three hostnames of your domain `example.org` (main domain, blog subdomain and shop subdomain). You already have an RSA private key with the correct UNIX file permissions stored within the following example directory with the name `confidential.pem`: +Lets assume that you want to get a single X.509 certificate from the Let's Encrypt CA which includes three hostnames of your domain `example.org` (main domain, blog subdomain and shop subdomain). You already have an private key with the correct UNIX file permissions stored within the following example directory with the name `confidential.pem`: /etc/painless-le/example.org/ └── [-rw-r----- user group ] confidential.pem @@ -38,4 +38,4 @@ The certbot client will now contact the ACME challenge servers and runs a tempor ├── [-rw-r----- user group ] confidential.pem └── [-rw-r----- user group ] intermediate.pem -**Note:** The new certificates inherit the UNIX file permissions (**chmod** and **chown**) of the RSA private key `confidential.pem`! \ No newline at end of file +**Note:** The new certificates inherit the UNIX file permissions (**chmod** and **chown**) of the private key `confidential.pem`! \ No newline at end of file -- cgit v1.2.3