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nixpkgs/nixos/modules/security/acme.nix

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{ config, lib, pkgs, ... }:
with lib;
let
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cfg = config.security.acme;
certOpts = { name, ... }: {
options = {
webroot = mkOption {
type = types.nullOr types.str;
default = null;
example = "/var/lib/acme/acme-challenges";
description = ''
Where the webroot of the HTTP vhost is located.
<filename>.well-known/acme-challenge/</filename> directory
will be created below the webroot if it doesn't exist.
<literal>http://example.org/.well-known/acme-challenge/</literal> must also
be available (notice unencrypted HTTP).
'';
};
server = mkOption {
type = types.nullOr types.str;
default = null;
description = ''
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ACME Directory Resource URI. Defaults to Let's Encrypt's
production endpoint,
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<link xlink:href="https://acme-v02.api.letsencrypt.org/directory"/>, if unset.
'';
};
domain = mkOption {
type = types.str;
default = name;
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description = "Domain to fetch certificate for (defaults to the entry name).";
};
email = mkOption {
type = types.nullOr types.str;
default = cfg.email;
description = "Contact email address for the CA to be able to reach you.";
};
user = mkOption {
type = types.str;
default = "root";
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description = "User running the ACME client.";
};
group = mkOption {
type = types.str;
default = "root";
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description = "Group running the ACME client.";
};
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allowKeysForGroup = mkOption {
type = types.bool;
default = false;
description = ''
Give read permissions to the specified group
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(<option>security.acme.cert.&lt;name&gt;.group</option>) to read SSL private certificates.
'';
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};
postRun = mkOption {
type = types.lines;
default = "";
example = "systemctl reload nginx.service";
description = ''
Commands to run after new certificates go live. Typically
the web server and other servers using certificates need to
be reloaded.
Executed in the same directory with the new certificate.
'';
};
Fix letsencrypt (#60219) * nixos/acme: Fix ordering of cert requests When subsequent certificates would be added, they would not wake up nginx correctly due to target units only being triggered once. We now added more fine-grained systemd dependencies to make sure nginx always is aware of new certificates and doesn't restart too early resulting in a crash. Furthermore, the acme module has been refactored. Mostly to get rid of the deprecated PermissionStartOnly systemd options which were deprecated. Below is a summary of changes made. * Use SERVICE_RESULT to determine status This was added in systemd v232. we don't have to keep track of the EXITCODE ourselves anymore. * Add regression test for requesting mutliple domains * Deprecate 'directory' option We now use systemd's StateDirectory option to manage create and permissions of the acme state directory. * The webroot is created using a systemd.tmpfiles.rules rule instead of the preStart script. * Depend on certs directly By getting rid of the target units, we make sure ordering is correct in the case that you add new certs after already having deployed some. Reason it broke before: acme-certificates.target would be in active state, and if you then add a new cert, it would still be active and hence nginx would restart without even requesting a new cert. Not good! We make the dependencies more fine-grained now. this should fix that * Remove activationDelay option It complicated the code a lot, and is rather arbitrary. What if your activation script takes more than activationDelay seconds? Instead, one should use systemd dependencies to make sure some action happens before setting the certificate live. e.g. If you want to wait until your cert is published in DNS DANE / TLSA, you could create a unit that blocks until it appears in DNS: ``` RequiredBy=acme-${cert}.service After=acme-${cert}.service ExecStart=publish-wait-for-dns-script ```
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directory = mkOption {
type = types.str;
readOnly = true;
default = "/var/lib/acme/${name}";
description = "Directory where certificate and other state is stored.";
};
extraDomains = mkOption {
type = types.attrsOf (types.nullOr types.str);
default = {};
example = literalExample ''
{
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"example.org" = null;
"mydomain.org" = null;
}
'';
description = ''
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A list of extra domain names, which are included in the one certificate to be issued.
Setting a distinct server root is deprecated and not functional in 20.03+
'';
};
keyType = mkOption {
type = types.str;
nixos/acme: change default keyType to ec256 Previously, the NixOS ACME module defaulted to using P-384 for TLS certificates. I believe that this is a mistake, and that we should use P-256 instead, despite it being theoretically cryptographically weaker. The security margin of a 256-bit elliptic curve cipher is substantial; beyond a certain level, more bits in the key serve more to slow things down than add meaningful protection. It's much more likely that ECDSA will be broken entirely, or some fatal flaw will be found in the NIST curves that makes them all insecure, than that the security margin will be reduced enough to put P-256 at risk but not P-384. It's also inconsistent to target a curve with a 192-bit security margin when our recommended nginx TLS configuration allows 128-bit AES. [This Stack Exchange answer][pornin] by cryptographer Thomas Pornin conveys the general attitude among experts: > Use P-256 to minimize trouble. If you feel that your manhood is > threatened by using a 256-bit curve where a 384-bit curve is > available, then use P-384: it will increases your computational and > network costs (a factor of about 3 for CPU, a few extra dozen bytes > on the network) but this is likely to be negligible in practice (in a > SSL-powered Web server, the heavy cost is in "Web", not "SSL"). [pornin]: https://security.stackexchange.com/a/78624 While the NIST curves have many flaws (see [SafeCurves][safecurves]), P-256 and P-384 are no different in this respect; SafeCurves gives them the same rating. The only NIST curve Bernstein [thinks better of, P-521][bernstein] (see "Other standard primes"), isn't usable for Web PKI (it's [not supported by BoringSSL by default][boringssl] and hence [doesn't work in Chromium/Chrome][chromium], and Let's Encrypt [don't support it either][letsencrypt]). [safecurves]: https://safecurves.cr.yp.to/ [bernstein]: https://blog.cr.yp.to/20140323-ecdsa.html [boringssl]: https://boringssl.googlesource.com/boringssl/+/e9fc3e547e557492316932b62881c3386973ceb2 [chromium]: https://bugs.chromium.org/p/chromium/issues/detail?id=478225 [letsencrypt]: https://letsencrypt.org/docs/integration-guide/#supported-key-algorithms So there's no real benefit to using P-384; what's the cost? In the Stack Exchange answer I linked, Pornin estimates a factor of 3× CPU usage, which wouldn't be so bad; unfortunately, this is wildly optimistic in practice, as P-256 is much more common and therefore much better optimized. [This GitHub comment][openssl] measures the performance differential for raw Diffie-Hellman operations with OpenSSL 1.1.1 at a whopping 14× (even P-521 fares better!); [Caddy disables P-384 by default][caddy] due to Go's [lack of accelerated assembly implementations][crypto/elliptic] for it, and the difference there seems even more extreme: [this golang-nuts post][golang-nuts] measures the key generation performance differential at 275×. It's unlikely to be the bottleneck for anyone, but I still feel kind of bad for anyone having lego generate hundreds of certificates and sign challenges with them with performance like that... [openssl]: https://github.com/mozilla/server-side-tls/issues/190#issuecomment-421831599 [caddy]: https://github.com/caddyserver/caddy/blob/2cab475ba516fa725d012f53ca417c3e039607de/modules/caddytls/values.go#L113-L124 [crypto/elliptic]: https://github.com/golang/go/tree/2910c5b4a01a573ebc97744890a07c1a3122c67a/src/crypto/elliptic [golang-nuts]: https://groups.google.com/forum/#!topic/golang-nuts/nlnJkBMMyzk In conclusion, there's no real reason to use P-384 in general: if you don't care about Web PKI compatibility and want to use a nicer curve, then Ed25519 or P-521 are better options; if you're a NIST-fearing paranoiac, you should use good old RSA; but if you're a normal person running a web server, then you're best served by just using P-256. Right now, NixOS makes an arbitrary decision between two equally-mediocre curves that just so happens to slow down ECDH key agreement for every TLS connection by over an order of magnitude; this commit fixes that. Unfortunately, it seems like existing P-384 certificates won't get migrated automatically on renewal without manual intervention, but that's a more general problem with the existing ACME module (see #81634; I know @yegortimoshenko is working on this). To migrate your certificates manually, run: $ sudo find /var/lib/acme/.lego/certificates -type f -delete $ sudo find /var/lib/acme -name '*.pem' -delete $ sudo systemctl restart 'acme-*.service' nginx.service (No warranty. If it breaks, you get to keep both pieces. But it worked for me.)
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default = "ec256";
description = ''
Key type to use for private keys.
For an up to date list of supported values check the --key-type option
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at <link xlink:href="https://go-acme.github.io/lego/usage/cli/#usage"/>.
'';
};
dnsProvider = mkOption {
type = types.nullOr types.str;
default = null;
example = "route53";
description = ''
DNS Challenge provider. For a list of supported providers, see the "code"
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field of the DNS providers listed at <link xlink:href="https://go-acme.github.io/lego/dns/"/>.
'';
};
credentialsFile = mkOption {
type = types.path;
description = ''
Path to an EnvironmentFile for the cert's service containing any required and
optional environment variables for your selected dnsProvider.
To find out what values you need to set, consult the documentation at
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<link xlink:href="https://go-acme.github.io/lego/dns/"/> for the corresponding dnsProvider.
'';
example = "/var/src/secrets/example.org-route53-api-token";
};
dnsPropagationCheck = mkOption {
type = types.bool;
default = true;
description = ''
Toggles lego DNS propagation check, which is used alongside DNS-01
challenge to ensure the DNS entries required are available.
'';
};
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ocspMustStaple = mkOption {
type = types.bool;
default = false;
description = ''
Turns on the OCSP Must-Staple TLS extension.
Make sure you know what you're doing! See:
<itemizedlist>
<listitem><para><link xlink:href="https://blog.apnic.net/2019/01/15/is-the-web-ready-for-ocsp-must-staple/" /></para></listitem>
<listitem><para><link xlink:href="https://blog.hboeck.de/archives/886-The-Problem-with-OCSP-Stapling-and-Must-Staple-and-why-Certificate-Revocation-is-still-broken.html" /></para></listitem>
</itemizedlist>
'';
};
extraLegoRenewFlags = mkOption {
type = types.listOf types.str;
default = [];
description = ''
Additional flags to pass to lego renew.
'';
};
};
};
in
{
###### interface
imports = [
(mkRemovedOptionModule [ "security" "acme" "production" ] ''
Use security.acme.server to define your staging ACME server URL instead.
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To use Let's Encrypt's staging server, use security.acme.server =
"https://acme-staging-v02.api.letsencrypt.org/directory".
''
)
(mkRemovedOptionModule [ "security" "acme" "directory"] "ACME Directory is now hardcoded to /var/lib/acme and its permisisons are managed by systemd. See https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/issues/53852 for more info.")
(mkRemovedOptionModule [ "security" "acme" "preDelay"] "This option has been removed. If you want to make sure that something executes before certificates are provisioned, add a RequiredBy=acme-\${cert}.service to the service you want to execute before the cert renewal")
(mkRemovedOptionModule [ "security" "acme" "activationDelay"] "This option has been removed. If you want to make sure that something executes before certificates are provisioned, add a RequiredBy=acme-\${cert}.service to the service you want to execute before the cert renewal")
(mkChangedOptionModule [ "security" "acme" "validMin"] [ "security" "acme" "validMinDays"] (config: config.security.acme.validMin / (24 * 3600)))
];
options = {
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security.acme = {
validMinDays = mkOption {
type = types.int;
default = 30;
description = "Minimum remaining validity before renewal in days.";
};
email = mkOption {
type = types.nullOr types.str;
default = null;
description = "Contact email address for the CA to be able to reach you.";
};
renewInterval = mkOption {
type = types.str;
default = "daily";
description = ''
Systemd calendar expression when to check for renewal. See
<citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd.time</refentrytitle>
<manvolnum>7</manvolnum></citerefentry>.
'';
};
server = mkOption {
type = types.nullOr types.str;
default = null;
description = ''
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ACME Directory Resource URI. Defaults to Let's Encrypt's
production endpoint,
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<link xlink:href="https://acme-v02.api.letsencrypt.org/directory"/>, if unset.
'';
};
preliminarySelfsigned = mkOption {
type = types.bool;
default = true;
description = ''
Whether a preliminary self-signed certificate should be generated before
doing ACME requests. This can be useful when certificates are required in
a webserver, but ACME needs the webserver to make its requests.
With preliminary self-signed certificate the webserver can be started and
can later reload the correct ACME certificates.
'';
};
acceptTerms = mkOption {
type = types.bool;
default = false;
description = ''
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Accept the CA's terms of service. The default provider is Let's Encrypt,
you can find their ToS at <link xlink:href="https://letsencrypt.org/repository/"/>.
'';
};
certs = mkOption {
default = { };
type = with types; attrsOf (submodule certOpts);
description = ''
Fix letsencrypt (#60219) * nixos/acme: Fix ordering of cert requests When subsequent certificates would be added, they would not wake up nginx correctly due to target units only being triggered once. We now added more fine-grained systemd dependencies to make sure nginx always is aware of new certificates and doesn't restart too early resulting in a crash. Furthermore, the acme module has been refactored. Mostly to get rid of the deprecated PermissionStartOnly systemd options which were deprecated. Below is a summary of changes made. * Use SERVICE_RESULT to determine status This was added in systemd v232. we don't have to keep track of the EXITCODE ourselves anymore. * Add regression test for requesting mutliple domains * Deprecate 'directory' option We now use systemd's StateDirectory option to manage create and permissions of the acme state directory. * The webroot is created using a systemd.tmpfiles.rules rule instead of the preStart script. * Depend on certs directly By getting rid of the target units, we make sure ordering is correct in the case that you add new certs after already having deployed some. Reason it broke before: acme-certificates.target would be in active state, and if you then add a new cert, it would still be active and hence nginx would restart without even requesting a new cert. Not good! We make the dependencies more fine-grained now. this should fix that * Remove activationDelay option It complicated the code a lot, and is rather arbitrary. What if your activation script takes more than activationDelay seconds? Instead, one should use systemd dependencies to make sure some action happens before setting the certificate live. e.g. If you want to wait until your cert is published in DNS DANE / TLSA, you could create a unit that blocks until it appears in DNS: ``` RequiredBy=acme-${cert}.service After=acme-${cert}.service ExecStart=publish-wait-for-dns-script ```
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Attribute set of certificates to get signed and renewed. Creates
<literal>acme-''${cert}.{service,timer}</literal> systemd units for
each certificate defined here. Other services can add dependencies
to those units if they rely on the certificates being present,
or trigger restarts of the service if certificates get renewed.
'';
example = literalExample ''
{
"example.com" = {
webroot = "/var/www/challenges/";
email = "foo@example.com";
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extraDomains = { "www.example.com" = null; "foo.example.com" = null; };
};
"bar.example.com" = {
webroot = "/var/www/challenges/";
email = "bar@example.com";
};
}
'';
};
};
};
###### implementation
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config = mkMerge [
(mkIf (cfg.certs != { }) {
assertions = let
certs = (mapAttrsToList (k: v: v) cfg.certs);
in [
{
assertion = all (certOpts: certOpts.dnsProvider == null || certOpts.webroot == null) certs;
message = ''
Options `security.acme.certs.<name>.dnsProvider` and
`security.acme.certs.<name>.webroot` are mutually exclusive.
'';
}
{
assertion = cfg.email != null || all (certOpts: certOpts.email != null) certs;
message = ''
You must define `security.acme.certs.<name>.email` or
`security.acme.email` to register with the CA.
'';
}
{
assertion = cfg.acceptTerms;
message = ''
You must accept the CA's terms of service before using
the ACME module by setting `security.acme.acceptTerms`
to `true`. For Let's Encrypt's ToS see https://letsencrypt.org/repository/
'';
}
];
systemd.services = let
services = concatLists servicesLists;
servicesLists = mapAttrsToList certToServices cfg.certs;
certToServices = cert: data:
let
# StateDirectory must be relative, and will be created under /var/lib by systemd
Fix letsencrypt (#60219) * nixos/acme: Fix ordering of cert requests When subsequent certificates would be added, they would not wake up nginx correctly due to target units only being triggered once. We now added more fine-grained systemd dependencies to make sure nginx always is aware of new certificates and doesn't restart too early resulting in a crash. Furthermore, the acme module has been refactored. Mostly to get rid of the deprecated PermissionStartOnly systemd options which were deprecated. Below is a summary of changes made. * Use SERVICE_RESULT to determine status This was added in systemd v232. we don't have to keep track of the EXITCODE ourselves anymore. * Add regression test for requesting mutliple domains * Deprecate 'directory' option We now use systemd's StateDirectory option to manage create and permissions of the acme state directory. * The webroot is created using a systemd.tmpfiles.rules rule instead of the preStart script. * Depend on certs directly By getting rid of the target units, we make sure ordering is correct in the case that you add new certs after already having deployed some. Reason it broke before: acme-certificates.target would be in active state, and if you then add a new cert, it would still be active and hence nginx would restart without even requesting a new cert. Not good! We make the dependencies more fine-grained now. this should fix that * Remove activationDelay option It complicated the code a lot, and is rather arbitrary. What if your activation script takes more than activationDelay seconds? Instead, one should use systemd dependencies to make sure some action happens before setting the certificate live. e.g. If you want to wait until your cert is published in DNS DANE / TLSA, you could create a unit that blocks until it appears in DNS: ``` RequiredBy=acme-${cert}.service After=acme-${cert}.service ExecStart=publish-wait-for-dns-script ```
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lpath = "acme/${cert}";
apath = "/var/lib/${lpath}";
spath = "/var/lib/acme/.lego/${cert}";
keyName = builtins.replaceStrings ["*"] ["_"] data.domain;
requestedDomains = pipe ([ data.domain ] ++ (attrNames data.extraDomains)) [
(domains: sort builtins.lessThan domains)
(domains: concatStringsSep "," domains)
];
fileMode = if data.allowKeysForGroup then "640" else "600";
globalOpts = [ "-d" data.domain "--email" data.email "--path" "." "--key-type" data.keyType ]
++ optionals (cfg.acceptTerms) [ "--accept-tos" ]
++ optionals (data.dnsProvider != null && !data.dnsPropagationCheck) [ "--dns.disable-cp" ]
++ concatLists (mapAttrsToList (name: root: [ "-d" name ]) data.extraDomains)
++ (if data.dnsProvider != null then [ "--dns" data.dnsProvider ] else [ "--http" "--http.webroot" data.webroot ])
++ optionals (cfg.server != null || data.server != null) ["--server" (if data.server == null then cfg.server else data.server)];
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certOpts = optionals data.ocspMustStaple [ "--must-staple" ];
runOpts = escapeShellArgs (globalOpts ++ [ "run" ] ++ certOpts);
renewOpts = escapeShellArgs (globalOpts ++
[ "renew" "--days" (toString cfg.validMinDays) ] ++
certOpts ++ data.extraLegoRenewFlags);
acmeService = {
description = "Renew ACME Certificate for ${cert}";
path = with pkgs; [ openssl ];
after = [ "network.target" "network-online.target" ];
wants = [ "network-online.target" ];
wantedBy = mkIf (!config.boot.isContainer) [ "multi-user.target" ];
serviceConfig = {
Type = "oneshot";
User = data.user;
Group = data.group;
PrivateTmp = true;
StateDirectory = "acme/.lego/${cert} acme/.lego/accounts ${lpath}";
StateDirectoryMode = if data.allowKeysForGroup then "750" else "700";
WorkingDirectory = spath;
# Only try loading the credentialsFile if the dns challenge is enabled
EnvironmentFile = if data.dnsProvider != null then data.credentialsFile else null;
ExecStart = pkgs.writeScript "acme-start" ''
#!${pkgs.runtimeShell} -e
test -L ${spath}/accounts -o -d ${spath}/accounts || ln -s ../accounts ${spath}/accounts
LEGO_ARGS=(${runOpts})
if [ -e ${spath}/certificates/${keyName}.crt ]; then
REQUESTED_DOMAINS="${requestedDomains}"
EXISTING_DOMAINS="$(openssl x509 -in ${spath}/certificates/${keyName}.crt -noout -ext subjectAltName | tail -n1 | sed -e 's/ *DNS://g')"
if [ "''${REQUESTED_DOMAINS}" == "''${EXISTING_DOMAINS}" ]; then
LEGO_ARGS=(${renewOpts})
fi
fi
${pkgs.lego}/bin/lego ''${LEGO_ARGS[@]}
'';
ExecStartPost =
Fix letsencrypt (#60219) * nixos/acme: Fix ordering of cert requests When subsequent certificates would be added, they would not wake up nginx correctly due to target units only being triggered once. We now added more fine-grained systemd dependencies to make sure nginx always is aware of new certificates and doesn't restart too early resulting in a crash. Furthermore, the acme module has been refactored. Mostly to get rid of the deprecated PermissionStartOnly systemd options which were deprecated. Below is a summary of changes made. * Use SERVICE_RESULT to determine status This was added in systemd v232. we don't have to keep track of the EXITCODE ourselves anymore. * Add regression test for requesting mutliple domains * Deprecate 'directory' option We now use systemd's StateDirectory option to manage create and permissions of the acme state directory. * The webroot is created using a systemd.tmpfiles.rules rule instead of the preStart script. * Depend on certs directly By getting rid of the target units, we make sure ordering is correct in the case that you add new certs after already having deployed some. Reason it broke before: acme-certificates.target would be in active state, and if you then add a new cert, it would still be active and hence nginx would restart without even requesting a new cert. Not good! We make the dependencies more fine-grained now. this should fix that * Remove activationDelay option It complicated the code a lot, and is rather arbitrary. What if your activation script takes more than activationDelay seconds? Instead, one should use systemd dependencies to make sure some action happens before setting the certificate live. e.g. If you want to wait until your cert is published in DNS DANE / TLSA, you could create a unit that blocks until it appears in DNS: ``` RequiredBy=acme-${cert}.service After=acme-${cert}.service ExecStart=publish-wait-for-dns-script ```
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let
script = pkgs.writeScript "acme-post-start" ''
Fix letsencrypt (#60219) * nixos/acme: Fix ordering of cert requests When subsequent certificates would be added, they would not wake up nginx correctly due to target units only being triggered once. We now added more fine-grained systemd dependencies to make sure nginx always is aware of new certificates and doesn't restart too early resulting in a crash. Furthermore, the acme module has been refactored. Mostly to get rid of the deprecated PermissionStartOnly systemd options which were deprecated. Below is a summary of changes made. * Use SERVICE_RESULT to determine status This was added in systemd v232. we don't have to keep track of the EXITCODE ourselves anymore. * Add regression test for requesting mutliple domains * Deprecate 'directory' option We now use systemd's StateDirectory option to manage create and permissions of the acme state directory. * The webroot is created using a systemd.tmpfiles.rules rule instead of the preStart script. * Depend on certs directly By getting rid of the target units, we make sure ordering is correct in the case that you add new certs after already having deployed some. Reason it broke before: acme-certificates.target would be in active state, and if you then add a new cert, it would still be active and hence nginx would restart without even requesting a new cert. Not good! We make the dependencies more fine-grained now. this should fix that * Remove activationDelay option It complicated the code a lot, and is rather arbitrary. What if your activation script takes more than activationDelay seconds? Instead, one should use systemd dependencies to make sure some action happens before setting the certificate live. e.g. If you want to wait until your cert is published in DNS DANE / TLSA, you could create a unit that blocks until it appears in DNS: ``` RequiredBy=acme-${cert}.service After=acme-${cert}.service ExecStart=publish-wait-for-dns-script ```
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#!${pkgs.runtimeShell} -e
cd ${apath}
# Test that existing cert is older than new cert
KEY=${spath}/certificates/${keyName}.key
KEY_CHANGED=no
if [ -e $KEY -a $KEY -nt key.pem ]; then
KEY_CHANGED=yes
cp -p ${spath}/certificates/${keyName}.key key.pem
cp -p ${spath}/certificates/${keyName}.crt fullchain.pem
cp -p ${spath}/certificates/${keyName}.issuer.crt chain.pem
ln -sf fullchain.pem cert.pem
cat key.pem fullchain.pem > full.pem
fi
chmod ${fileMode} *.pem
chown '${data.user}:${data.group}' *.pem
if [ "$KEY_CHANGED" = "yes" ]; then
: # noop in case postRun is empty
${data.postRun}
fi
Fix letsencrypt (#60219) * nixos/acme: Fix ordering of cert requests When subsequent certificates would be added, they would not wake up nginx correctly due to target units only being triggered once. We now added more fine-grained systemd dependencies to make sure nginx always is aware of new certificates and doesn't restart too early resulting in a crash. Furthermore, the acme module has been refactored. Mostly to get rid of the deprecated PermissionStartOnly systemd options which were deprecated. Below is a summary of changes made. * Use SERVICE_RESULT to determine status This was added in systemd v232. we don't have to keep track of the EXITCODE ourselves anymore. * Add regression test for requesting mutliple domains * Deprecate 'directory' option We now use systemd's StateDirectory option to manage create and permissions of the acme state directory. * The webroot is created using a systemd.tmpfiles.rules rule instead of the preStart script. * Depend on certs directly By getting rid of the target units, we make sure ordering is correct in the case that you add new certs after already having deployed some. Reason it broke before: acme-certificates.target would be in active state, and if you then add a new cert, it would still be active and hence nginx would restart without even requesting a new cert. Not good! We make the dependencies more fine-grained now. this should fix that * Remove activationDelay option It complicated the code a lot, and is rather arbitrary. What if your activation script takes more than activationDelay seconds? Instead, one should use systemd dependencies to make sure some action happens before setting the certificate live. e.g. If you want to wait until your cert is published in DNS DANE / TLSA, you could create a unit that blocks until it appears in DNS: ``` RequiredBy=acme-${cert}.service After=acme-${cert}.service ExecStart=publish-wait-for-dns-script ```
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'';
in
"+${script}";
};
Fix letsencrypt (#60219) * nixos/acme: Fix ordering of cert requests When subsequent certificates would be added, they would not wake up nginx correctly due to target units only being triggered once. We now added more fine-grained systemd dependencies to make sure nginx always is aware of new certificates and doesn't restart too early resulting in a crash. Furthermore, the acme module has been refactored. Mostly to get rid of the deprecated PermissionStartOnly systemd options which were deprecated. Below is a summary of changes made. * Use SERVICE_RESULT to determine status This was added in systemd v232. we don't have to keep track of the EXITCODE ourselves anymore. * Add regression test for requesting mutliple domains * Deprecate 'directory' option We now use systemd's StateDirectory option to manage create and permissions of the acme state directory. * The webroot is created using a systemd.tmpfiles.rules rule instead of the preStart script. * Depend on certs directly By getting rid of the target units, we make sure ordering is correct in the case that you add new certs after already having deployed some. Reason it broke before: acme-certificates.target would be in active state, and if you then add a new cert, it would still be active and hence nginx would restart without even requesting a new cert. Not good! We make the dependencies more fine-grained now. this should fix that * Remove activationDelay option It complicated the code a lot, and is rather arbitrary. What if your activation script takes more than activationDelay seconds? Instead, one should use systemd dependencies to make sure some action happens before setting the certificate live. e.g. If you want to wait until your cert is published in DNS DANE / TLSA, you could create a unit that blocks until it appears in DNS: ``` RequiredBy=acme-${cert}.service After=acme-${cert}.service ExecStart=publish-wait-for-dns-script ```
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};
selfsignedService = {
description = "Create preliminary self-signed certificate for ${cert}";
path = [ pkgs.openssl ];
script =
''
workdir="$(mktemp -d)"
# Create CA
openssl genrsa -des3 -passout pass:xxxx -out $workdir/ca.pass.key 2048
openssl rsa -passin pass:xxxx -in $workdir/ca.pass.key -out $workdir/ca.key
openssl req -new -key $workdir/ca.key -out $workdir/ca.csr \
-subj "/C=UK/ST=Warwickshire/L=Leamington/O=OrgName/OU=Security Department/CN=example.com"
openssl x509 -req -days 1 -in $workdir/ca.csr -signkey $workdir/ca.key -out $workdir/ca.crt
# Create key
openssl genrsa -des3 -passout pass:xxxx -out $workdir/server.pass.key 2048
openssl rsa -passin pass:xxxx -in $workdir/server.pass.key -out $workdir/server.key
openssl req -new -key $workdir/server.key -out $workdir/server.csr \
-subj "/C=UK/ST=Warwickshire/L=Leamington/O=OrgName/OU=IT Department/CN=example.com"
openssl x509 -req -days 1 -in $workdir/server.csr -CA $workdir/ca.crt \
-CAkey $workdir/ca.key -CAserial $workdir/ca.srl -CAcreateserial \
-out $workdir/server.crt
# Copy key to destination
cp $workdir/server.key ${apath}/key.pem
# Create fullchain.pem (same format as "simp_le ... -f fullchain.pem" creates)
cat $workdir/{server.crt,ca.crt} > "${apath}/fullchain.pem"
# Create full.pem for e.g. lighttpd
cat $workdir/{server.key,server.crt,ca.crt} > "${apath}/full.pem"
# Give key acme permissions
chown '${data.user}:${data.group}' "${apath}/"{key,fullchain,full}.pem
chmod ${fileMode} "${apath}/"{key,fullchain,full}.pem
'';
serviceConfig = {
Type = "oneshot";
PrivateTmp = true;
Fix letsencrypt (#60219) * nixos/acme: Fix ordering of cert requests When subsequent certificates would be added, they would not wake up nginx correctly due to target units only being triggered once. We now added more fine-grained systemd dependencies to make sure nginx always is aware of new certificates and doesn't restart too early resulting in a crash. Furthermore, the acme module has been refactored. Mostly to get rid of the deprecated PermissionStartOnly systemd options which were deprecated. Below is a summary of changes made. * Use SERVICE_RESULT to determine status This was added in systemd v232. we don't have to keep track of the EXITCODE ourselves anymore. * Add regression test for requesting mutliple domains * Deprecate 'directory' option We now use systemd's StateDirectory option to manage create and permissions of the acme state directory. * The webroot is created using a systemd.tmpfiles.rules rule instead of the preStart script. * Depend on certs directly By getting rid of the target units, we make sure ordering is correct in the case that you add new certs after already having deployed some. Reason it broke before: acme-certificates.target would be in active state, and if you then add a new cert, it would still be active and hence nginx would restart without even requesting a new cert. Not good! We make the dependencies more fine-grained now. this should fix that * Remove activationDelay option It complicated the code a lot, and is rather arbitrary. What if your activation script takes more than activationDelay seconds? Instead, one should use systemd dependencies to make sure some action happens before setting the certificate live. e.g. If you want to wait until your cert is published in DNS DANE / TLSA, you could create a unit that blocks until it appears in DNS: ``` RequiredBy=acme-${cert}.service After=acme-${cert}.service ExecStart=publish-wait-for-dns-script ```
2019-08-29 15:32:59 +01:00
StateDirectory = lpath;
User = data.user;
Group = data.group;
};
unitConfig = {
# Do not create self-signed key when key already exists
ConditionPathExists = "!${apath}/key.pem";
};
};
in (
[ { name = "acme-${cert}"; value = acmeService; } ]
++ optional cfg.preliminarySelfsigned { name = "acme-selfsigned-${cert}"; value = selfsignedService; }
);
servicesAttr = listToAttrs services;
in
Fix letsencrypt (#60219) * nixos/acme: Fix ordering of cert requests When subsequent certificates would be added, they would not wake up nginx correctly due to target units only being triggered once. We now added more fine-grained systemd dependencies to make sure nginx always is aware of new certificates and doesn't restart too early resulting in a crash. Furthermore, the acme module has been refactored. Mostly to get rid of the deprecated PermissionStartOnly systemd options which were deprecated. Below is a summary of changes made. * Use SERVICE_RESULT to determine status This was added in systemd v232. we don't have to keep track of the EXITCODE ourselves anymore. * Add regression test for requesting mutliple domains * Deprecate 'directory' option We now use systemd's StateDirectory option to manage create and permissions of the acme state directory. * The webroot is created using a systemd.tmpfiles.rules rule instead of the preStart script. * Depend on certs directly By getting rid of the target units, we make sure ordering is correct in the case that you add new certs after already having deployed some. Reason it broke before: acme-certificates.target would be in active state, and if you then add a new cert, it would still be active and hence nginx would restart without even requesting a new cert. Not good! We make the dependencies more fine-grained now. this should fix that * Remove activationDelay option It complicated the code a lot, and is rather arbitrary. What if your activation script takes more than activationDelay seconds? Instead, one should use systemd dependencies to make sure some action happens before setting the certificate live. e.g. If you want to wait until your cert is published in DNS DANE / TLSA, you could create a unit that blocks until it appears in DNS: ``` RequiredBy=acme-${cert}.service After=acme-${cert}.service ExecStart=publish-wait-for-dns-script ```
2019-08-29 15:32:59 +01:00
servicesAttr;
systemd.tmpfiles.rules =
map (data: "d ${data.webroot}/.well-known/acme-challenge - ${data.user} ${data.group}") (filter (data: data.webroot != null) (attrValues cfg.certs));
2015-12-12 15:06:24 +00:00
systemd.timers = let
# Allow systemd to pick a convenient time within the day
# to run the check.
# This allows the coalescing of multiple timer jobs.
# We divide by the number of certificates so that if you
# have many certificates, the renewals are distributed over
# the course of the day to avoid rate limits.
numCerts = length (attrNames cfg.certs);
_24hSecs = 60 * 60 * 24;
AccuracySec = "${toString (_24hSecs / numCerts)}s";
in flip mapAttrs' cfg.certs (cert: data: nameValuePair
2015-12-12 15:06:24 +00:00
("acme-${cert}")
({
description = "Renew ACME Certificate for ${cert}";
2015-12-12 15:06:24 +00:00
wantedBy = [ "timers.target" ];
timerConfig = {
OnCalendar = cfg.renewInterval;
2015-12-13 13:53:59 +00:00
Unit = "acme-${cert}.service";
Persistent = "yes";
inherit AccuracySec;
# Skew randomly within the day, per https://letsencrypt.org/docs/integration-guide/.
RandomizedDelaySec = "24h";
2015-12-12 15:06:24 +00:00
};
})
);
2019-08-13 22:52:01 +01:00
systemd.targets.acme-selfsigned-certificates = mkIf cfg.preliminarySelfsigned {};
systemd.targets.acme-certificates = {};
2015-12-12 15:06:24 +00:00
})
];
2016-05-09 06:53:27 +01:00
meta = {
maintainers = lib.teams.acme.members;
2016-05-09 06:53:27 +01:00
doc = ./acme.xml;
};
}