3.0 KiB
serve-https
A simple HTTPS static file server with valid TLS (SSL) certs.
Comes bundled a valid certificate for localhost.daplie.com, which is great for testing and development, and you can specify your own.
Also great for testing ACME certs from letsencrypt.org.
Install
npm install --global serve-https
serve-https
Serving /Users/foo/ at https://localhost.daplie.com:8443
Usage
-p <port>
- i.e.sudo serve-https -p 443
(defaults to 8443)-d <dirpath>
- i.e.serve-https -d /tmp/
(defaults topwd
)-c <content>
- i.e.server-https -c 'Hello, World! '
(defaults to directory index)--insecure-port <port>
- run an http server that redirects to https (off by default)
Specifying a custom HTTPS certificate:
--key /path/to/privkey.pem
specifies the server private key--cert /path/to/cert.pem
specifies the server certificate--chain /path/to/chain.pem
specifies the certificate authorities
Note: --chain
may specify single cert, a bundle, and may be used multiple times like so:
--chain /path/to/intermediate-ca-1.pem --chain /path/to/intermediate-ca-2.pem
Other options:
--serve-chain true
alias for-c
with the contents of chain.pem--servername example.com
changes the servername logged to the console--letsencrypt-certs example.com
sets and key, cert, and chain to standard letsencrypt locations
Examples
serve-https -p 1443 -c 'Hello from 1443' &
serve-https -p 2443 -c 'Hello from 2443' &
serve-https -p 3443 -d /tmp --insecure-port 4080 &
curl https://localhost.daplie.com:1443
> Hello from 1443
curl --insecure https://localhost:2443
> Hello from 2443
curl https://localhost.daplie.com:3443
> [html index listing of /tmp]
And if you tested http://localhost.daplie.com:4080 in a browser, it would redirect to https://localhost.daplie.com:3443.
(in curl it would just show an error message)
Testing ACME Let's Encrypt certs
In case you didn't know, you can get free https certificates from letsencrypt.org (ACME letsencrypt) and even a free subdomain from https://freedns.afraid.org.
If you want to quickly test the certificates you installed, you can do so like this:
sudo serve-https -p 8443 \
--letsencrypt-certs test.mooo.com \
--serve-chain true
which is equilavent to
sudo serve-https -p 8443 \
--servername test.mooo.com
--key /etc/letsencrypt/live/test.mooo.com/privkey.pem \
--cert /etc/letsencrypt/live/test.mooo.com/cert.pem \
--chain /etc/letsencrypt/live/test.mooo.com/chain.pem \
-c "$(cat 'sudo /etc/letsencrypt/live/test.mooo.com/chain.pem')"
and can be tested like so
curl --insecure https://test.mooo.com:8443 > ./chain.pem
curl https://test.mooo.com:8843 --cacert ./chain.pem