AJ ONeal f1f91b1254 | ||
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examples | ||
.gitignore | ||
LICENSE | ||
README.md | ||
index.js | ||
master.js | ||
package.json | ||
worker.js |
README.md
letsencrypt-cluster
Use automatic letsencrypt with node on multiple cores or even multiple machines.
- Take advantage of multi-core computing
- Process certificates in master
- Serve https from multiple workers
- Can work with any clustering strategy #1
Install
npm install --save letsencrypt-cluster@2.x
Usage
In a cluster environment you have some main file that boots your app and then conditionally loads certain code based on whether that fork is the master or just a worker.
In such a file you might want to define some of the options that need to be shared between both the master and the worker, like this:
boot.js
:
'use strict';
var cluster = require('cluster');
var path = require('path');
var os = require('os');
var main;
var sharedOptions = {
webrootPath: path.join(os.tmpdir(), 'acme-challenge') // /tmp/acme-challenge
// used by le-challenge-fs, the default plugin
, renewWithin: 10 * 24 * 60 * 60 * 1000 // 10 days before expiration
, debug: true
};
if (cluster.isMaster) {
main = require('./master');
}
else {
main = require('./worker');
}
main.init(sharedOptions);
Master
We think it makes the most sense to load letsencrypt in master. This can prevent race conditions (see node-letsencrypt#45) as only one process is writing the to file system or database at a time.
The main implementation detail here is approveDomains(options, certs, cb)
for new domain certificates
and potentially agreeToTerms(opts, cb)
for new accounts.
The master takes the same arguments as node-letsencrypt
(challenge
, store
, etc),
plus a few extra (approveDomains
... okay, just one extra):
master.js
:
'use strict';
var cluster = require('cluster');
module.exports.init = function (sharedOpts) {
var cores = require('os').cpus();
var master = require('letsencrypt-cluster/master').create({
debug: sharedOpts.debug
, server: 'staging' // CHANGE TO PRODUCTION
, renewWithin: sharedOpts.renewWithin
, webrootPath: sharedOpts.webrootPath
, approveDomains: function (masterOptions, certs, cb) {
// Do any work that must be done by master to approve this domain
// (in this example, it's assumed to be done by the worker)
var results = { domain: masterOptions.domain // required
, options: masterOptions // domains, email, agreeTos
, certs: certs }; // altnames, privkey, cert
cb(null, results);
}
});
cores.forEach(function () {
var worker = cluster.fork();
master.addWorker(worker);
});
};
Worker
The worker takes similar arguments to node-letsencrypt
,
but only ones that are useful for determining certificate
renewal and for le.challenge.get
.
If you want to a non-default le.challenge
worker.js
:
'use strict';
module.exports.init = function (sharedOpts) {
var worker = require('../worker').create({
debug: sharedOpts.debug
, renewWithin: sharedOpts.renewWithin
, webrootPath: sharedOpts.webrootPath
// , challenge: require('le-challenge-fs').create({ webrootPath: '...', ... })
, approveDomains: function (workerOptions, certs, cb) {
// opts = { domains, email, agreeTos, tosUrl }
// certs = { subject, altnames, expiresAt, issuedAt }
var results = {
domain: workerOptions.domains[0]
, options: {
domains: workerOptions.domains
}
, certs: certs
};
if (certs) {
// modify opts.domains to match the original request
// email is not necessary, because the account already exists
// this will only fail if the account has become corrupt
results.options.domains = certs.altnames;
cb(null, results);
return;
}
// This is where one would check one's application-specific database:
// 1. Lookup the domain to see which email it belongs to
// 2. Assign a default email if it isn't in the system
// 3. If the email has no le account, `agreeToTerms` will fire unless `agreeTos` is preset
results.options.email = 'john.doe@example.com'
results.options.agreeTos = true // causes agreeToTerms to be skipped
cb(null, results);
}
});
function app(req, res) {
res.end("Hello, World!");
}
var redirectHttps = require('redirect-https')();
var plainServer = require('http').createServer(worker.middleware(redirectHttps));
plainServer.listen(80);
var server = require('https').createServer(worker.httpsOptions, worker.middleware(app));
server.listen(443);
};
Message Passing
The master and workers will communicate through process.on('message', fn)
, process.send({})
,
worker.on('message', fn)
and worker.send({})
.
All messages have a type
property which is a string and begins with LE_
.
All other messages are ignored.