Name = "Hurricane Electric DNS" Description = '''''' URL = "https://dns.he.net/" Code = "hurricane" Since = "v4.3.0" Example = ''' HURRICANE_TOKENS=example.org:token \ lego --email myemail@example.com --dns hurricane -d example.org -d *.example.org run HURRICANE_TOKENS=my.example.org:token1,demo.example.org:token2 \ lego -m myemail@example.com --dns hurricane -d my.example.org -d demo.example.org ''' Additional = """ Before using lego to request a certificate for a given domain or wildcard (such as `my.example.org` or `*.my.example.org`), create a TXT record named `_acme-challenge.my.example.org`, and enable dynamic updates on it. Generate a token for each URL with Hurricane Electric's UI, and copy it down. Stick to alphanumeric tokens for greatest reliability. To authenticate with the Hurricane Electric API, add each record name/token pair you want to update to the `HURRICANE_TOKENS` environment variable, as shown in the examples. Record names (without the `_acme-challenge.` component) and their tokens are separated with colons, while the credential pairs are concatenated into a comma-separated list, like so: ``` HURRICANE_TOKENS=my.example.org:token1,demo.example.org:token2 ``` If you are issuing both a wildcard certificate and a standard certificate for a given subdomain, you should not have repeat entries for that name, as both will use the same credential. ``` HURRICANE_TOKENS=example.org:token ``` """ [Configuration] [Configuration.Credentials] HURRICANE_TOKENS = "TXT record names and tokens" [Configuration.Addtional] HURRICANE_POLLING_INTERVAL = "Time between DNS propagation checks" HURRICANE_PROPAGATION_TIMEOUT = "Maximum waiting time for DNS propagation; defaults to 300s (5 minutes)" HURRICANE_SEQUENCE_INTERVAL = "Time between sequential requests" HURRICANE_HTTP_TIMEOUT = "API request timeout" [Links] API = "https://dns.he.net/"