# [ACME.js](https://git.rootprojects.org/root/acme.js) v3 | Built by [Root](https://therootcompany.com) for [Greenlock](https://greenlock.domains) Free SSL Certificates from Let's Encrypt, for Node.js and Web Browsers Lightweight. Fast. Modern Crypto. Zero external dependecies. # Features | 15k gzipped | 55k minified | 88k (2,500 loc) source with comments | The primary goal of this library is to make it easy to get Accounts and Certificates through Let's Encrypt. - [x] Let's Encrypt v2 / ACME RFC 8555 (November 2019) - [x] POST-as-GET support - [x] Secure support for EC and RSA for account and server keys - [x] Simple and lightweight PEM, DER, ASN1, X509, and CSR implementations - [ ] (in-progress) StartTLS Everywhere™ - [x] Supports International Domain Names (i.e. `.中国`) - [x] Works with any [generic ACME challenge handler](https://git.rootprojects.org/root/acme-challenge-test.js) - [x] **http-01** for single or multiple domains per certificate - [x] **dns-01** for wildcards, localhost, private networks, etc - [x] VanillaJS, Zero External Dependencies - [x] Safe, Efficient, Maintained - [x] Node.js\* (v6+) - [x] WebPack - [x] Online Demo - See https://greenlock.domains \* Although we use `async/await` in the examples, the code is written in CommonJS, with Promises, so you can use it in Node.js and Browsers without transpiling. # Want Quick and Easy? ACME.js is a low-level tool for building Let's Encrypt clients in Node and Browsers. If you're looking for maximum convenience, try [Greenlock.js](https://git.rootprojects.org/root/greenlock-express.js). - # Online Demos - Greenlock for the Web - ACME.js Demo We expect that our hosted versions will meet all of yours needs. If they don't, please open an issue to let us know why. We'd much rather improve the app than have a hundred different versions running in the wild. However, in keeping to our values we've made the source visible for others to inspect, improve, and modify. # QuickStart To make it easy to generate, encode, and decode keys and certificates, ACME.js uses [Keypairs.js](https://git.rootprojects.org/root/keypairs.js) and [CSR.js](https://git.rootprojects.org/root/csr.js) ## Node.js ```js var ACME = require('@root/acme'); ``` ## WebPack ```html ``` (necessary in case the webserver headers don't specify `plain/text; charset="UTF-8"`) ```js var ACME = require('@root/acme'); ``` ## Vanilla JS ```html ``` (necessary in case the webserver headers don't specify `plain/text; charset="UTF-8"`) `acme.js` ```html ``` `acme.min.js` ```html ``` Use ```js var ACME = window['@root/acme']; ``` ## Examples You can see `tests/index.js`, `examples/index.html`, `examples/app.js` in the repo for full example usage. ### Emails: Maintainer vs Subscriber vs Customer - `maintainerEmail` should be the email address of the **author of the code**. This person will receive critical security and API change notifications. - `subscriberEmail` should be the email of the **admin of the hosting service**. This person agrees to the Let's Encrypt Terms of Service and will be notified when a certificate fails to renew. - `customerEmail` should be the email of individual who owns the domain. This is optional (not currently implemented). Generally speaking **YOU** are the _maintainer_ and you **or your employer** is the _subscriber_. If you (or your employer) is running any type of service you **SHOULD NOT** pass the _customer_ email as the subscriber email. If you are not running a service (you may be building a CLI, for example), then you should prompt the user for their email address, and they are the subscriber. ### Instantiate ACME.js Although built for Let's Encrypt, ACME.js will work with any server that supports draft-15 of the ACME spec (includes POST-as-GET support). The `init()` method takes a _directory url_ and initializes internal state according to its response. ```js var acme = ACME.create({ maintainerEmail: 'jon@example.com' }); acme.init('https://acme-staging-v02.api.letsencrypt.org/directory').then( function() { // Ready to use, show page $('body').hidden = false; } ); ``` ### Create ACME Account with Let's Encrypt ACME Accounts are key and device based, with an email address as a backup identifier. A public account key must be registered before an SSL certificate can be requested. ```js var accountPrivateKey; var account; Keypairs.generate({ kty: 'EC' }).then(function(pair) { accountPrivateKey = pair.private; return acme.accounts .create({ agreeToTerms: function(tos) { if ( window.confirm( "Do you agree to the ACME.js and Let's Encrypt Terms of Service?" ) ) { return Promise.resolve(tos); } }, accountKeypair: { privateKeyJwk: pair.private }, subscriberEmail: $('.js-email-input').value }) .then(function(_account) { account = _account; }); }); ``` ### Generate a Certificate Private Key ```js var certKeypair = await Keypairs.generate({ kty: 'RSA' }); var pem = await Keypairs.export({ jwk: certKeypair.private, encoding: 'pem' }); // This should be saved as `privkey.pem` console.log(pem); ``` ### Generate a CSR The easiest way to generate a Certificate Signing Request will be either with `openssl` or with `@root/CSR`. ```js var CSR = require('@root/csr'); var Enc = require('@root/encoding'); // 'subject' should be first in list var sortedDomains = ['example.com', 'www.example.com']; var csr = await CSR.csr({ jwk: certKeypair.private, domains: sortedDomains, encoding: 'der' }).then(function(der) { return Enc.bufToUrlBase64(der); }); ``` ### Get Free 90-day SSL Certificate Creating an ACME "order" for a 90-day SSL certificate requires use of the account private key, the names of domains to be secured, and a distinctly separate server private key. A domain ownership verification "challenge" (uploading a file to an unsecured HTTP url or setting a DNS record) is a required part of the process, which requires `set` and `remove` callbacks/promises. ```js var certinfo = await acme.certificates.create({ agreeToTerms: function(tos) { return tos; }, account: account, accountKeypair: { privateKeyJwk: accountPrivateKey }, csr: csr, domains: sortedDomains, challenges: challenges, // must be implemented customerEmail: null, skipChallengeTests: false, skipDryRun: false }); console.log('Got SSL Certificate:'); console.log(results.expires); // This should be saved as `fullchain.pem` console.log([results.cert, results.chain].join('\n')); ``` ### Example "Challenge" Implementation Typically here you're just presenting some sort of dialog to the user to ask them to upload a file or set a DNS record. It may be possible to do something fancy like using OAuth2 to login to Google Domanis to set a DNS address, etc, but it seems like that sort of fanciness is probably best reserved for server-side plugins. ```js var challenges = { 'http-01': { set: function(opts) { console.info('http-01 set challenge:'); console.info(opts.challengeUrl); console.info(opts.keyAuthorization); while ( !window.confirm('Upload the challenge file before continuing.') ) {} return Promise.resolve(); }, remove: function(opts) { console.log('http-01 remove challenge:', opts.challengeUrl); return Promise.resolve(); } } }; ``` # IDN - International Domain Names Convert domain names to `punycode` before creating the certificate: ```js var punycode = require('punycode'); acme.certificates.create({ // ... domains: ['example.com', 'www.example.com'].map(function(name) { return punycode.toASCII(name); }) }); ``` The punycode library itself is lightweight and dependency-free. It is available both in node and for browsers. # Testing You will need to use one of the [`acme-dns-01-*` plugins](https://www.npmjs.com/search?q=acme-dns-01-) to run the test locally. You'll also need a `.env` that looks something like the one in `examples/example.env`: ```bash ENV=DEV SUBSCRIBER_EMAIL=letsencrypt+staging@example.com BASE_DOMAIN=test.example.com CHALLENGE_TYPE=dns-01 CHALLENGE_PLUGIN=acme-dns-01-digitalocean CHALLENGE_OPTIONS='{"token":"xxxxxxxxxxxx"}' ``` For example: ```bash # Get the repo and change directories into it git clone https://git.rootprojects.org/root/bluecrypt-acme.js pushd bluecrypt-acme.js/ # Install the challenge plugin you'll use for the tests npm install --save-dev acme-dns-01-digitalocean # Copy the sample .env file rsync -av examples/example.env .env # Edit the config file to use a domain in your account, and your API token #vim .env code .env # Run the tests node tests/index.js ``` # Developing You can see `