2.5 KiB
title | date | draft |
---|---|---|
Examples | 2019-11-15T23:25:46+01:00 | false |
CLI Examples
Assumes the lego
binary has permission to bind to ports 80 and 443.
You can get a pre-built binary from the releases page.
If your environment does not allow you to bind to these ports, please read Port Usage.
Obtain a certificate
lego --email="foo@bar.com" --domains="example.com" --http run
(Find your certificate in the .lego
folder of current working directory.)
To renew the certificate
lego --email="foo@bar.com" --domains="example.com" --http renew
To renew the certificate only if it expires within 45 days
lego --email="foo@bar.com" --domains="example.com" --http renew --days 45
To renew the certificate (and hook)
The hook is executed only when the certificates are effectively renewed.
lego --email="foo@bar.com" --domains="example.com" --http renew --renew-hook="./myscript.sh"
Obtain a certificate using the DNS challenge
AWS_REGION=us-east-1 \
AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID=my_id \
AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY=my_key \
lego --email="foo@bar.com" --domains="example.com" --dns="route53" run
Obtain a certificate given a certificate signing request (CSR) generated by something else
lego --email="foo@bar.com" --http --csr=/path/to/csr.pem run
(lego will infer the domains to be validated based on the contents of the CSR, so make sure the CSR's Common Name and optional SubjectAltNames are set correctly.)
Misc HTTP-01 CLI Examples
Write HTTP-01 token to already "served" directory
If you have an existing server running on port 80 the --http
option needs to also use the --http.webroot
option.
This just writes the token to the given directory in the folder .well-known/acme-challenge
and does not start a server.
The given directory should be publicly served as /
on the domain(s) for the validation to complete.
If the given directory is not publicly served you will have to support rewriting the request to the directory;
You could also implement a rewrite to rewrite .well-known/acme-challenge
to the given directory .well-known/acme-challenge
.
You should be able to run an existing webserver on port 80 and have lego write the token file with the HTTP-01 challenge key authorization to <webroot dir>/.well-known/acme-challenge/
by running something like:
lego --accept-tos -m foo@bar.com --http --http.webroot /path/to/webroot -d example.com run