ACME dns-01 tests for Let's Encrypt integration. Any acme-dns-01- plugin should be able to pass these tests.
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README.md

greenlock-challenge-test | A Root Project

The test harness you should use when writing an ACME challenge strategy for Greenlock v2.7+ (and v3).

All implementations MUST pass these tests, which is a very easy thing to do (just set(), get(), and remove()).

The tests account for single-domain certificates (example.com) as well as multiple domain certs (SAN / AltName), wildcards (*.example.com), and valid private / localhost certificates. As someone creating a challenge strategy that's not something you have to take special consideration for - just pass the tests.

Install

npm install --save-dev greenlock-challenge-test@3.x

Usage

var tester = require('greenlock-challenge-test');

//var challenger = require('greenlock-challenge-http').create({});
//var challenger = require('greenlock-challenge-dns').create({});
var challenger = require('./YOUR-CHALLENGE-STRATEGY').create({});

// The dry-run tests can pass on, literally, 'example.com'
// but the integration tests require that you have control over the domain
var domain = 'example.com';

tester.test('http-01', domain, challenger).then(function () {
  console.info("PASS");
});

Reference Implementations

These are plugins that use the v2.7+ (v3) API, and pass this test harness, which you should use as a model for any plugins that you create.

Example

See example.js (it works).

Overview

Here's a quick pseudo stub-out of what a test-passing plugin object might look like:

tester.test('http-01', 'example.com', {
  set: function (opts) {
    var ch = opts.challenge;
    // { type: 'http-01' // or 'dns-01'
    // , identifier: { type: 'dns', value: 'example.com' }
    // , wildcard: false
    // , token: 'xxxx'
    // , keyAuthorization: 'xxxx.yyyy'
    // , dnsHost: '_acme-challenge.example.com'
    // , dnsAuthorization: 'zzzz' }

    return API.set(...);
  }
, get: function (query) {
    var ch = query.challenge;
    // { type: 'http-01' // or 'dns-01', 'tls-alpn-01', etc
    // , identifier: { type: 'dns', value: 'example.com' }
    //   // http-01 only
    // , token: 'xxxx'
    // , url: '...' // for testing and debugging
    //   // dns-01 only, for testing / dubgging
    // , altname: '...'
    // , dnsHost: '...'
    // , wildcard: false }
    // Note: query.identifier.value is different for http-01 than for dns-01

    return API.get(...).then(function (secret) {
      // http-01
      return { keyAuthorization: secret };
      // dns-01
      //return { dnsAuthorization: secret };
    });
  }
, remove: function (opts) {
    var ch = opts.challenge;
    // same options as in `set()` (which are not the same as `get()`

    return API.remove(...);
  }
}).then(function () {
  console.info("PASS");
});

Note: The API.get(), API.set(), and API.remove() is where you do your magic up to upload a file to the correct location on an http serever, set DNS records, or add the appropriate data to the database that handles such things.