CBMS ERP Let’s Encrypt

$0.00

Request SSL certificates from letsencrypt.org ‘=============
Let’s Encrypt
=============

.. !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
!! This file is generated by oca-gen-addon-readme !!
!! changes will be overwritten. !!
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

.. |badge1| image:: https://img.shields.io/badge/maturity-Beta-yellow.png
:target: https://odoo-community.org/page/development-status
:alt: Beta
.. |badge2| image:: https://img.shields.io/badge/licence-AGPL–3-blue.png
:target: http://www.gnu.org/licenses/agpl-3.0-standalone.html
:alt: License: AGPL-3
.. |badge3| image:: https://img.shields.io/badge/github-OCA%2Fserver–tools-lightgray.png?logo=github
:target: https://github.com/OCA/server-tools/tree/15.0/letsencrypt
:alt: OCA/server-tools
.. |badge4| image:: https://img.shields.io/badge/weblate-Translate%20me-F47D42.png
:target: https://translation.odoo-community.org/projects/server-tools-15-0/server-tools-15-0-letsencrypt
:alt: Translate me on Weblate
.. |badge5| image:: https://img.shields.io/badge/runbot-Try%20me-875A7B.png
:target: https://runbot.odoo-community.org/runbot/149/15.0
:alt: Try me on Runbot

|badge1| |badge2| |badge3| |badge4| |badge5|

This module was written to have your CBMS ODOO installation request SSL certificates
from https://letsencrypt.org automatically.

**Table of contents**

.. contents::
:local:

Installation
============

After installation, this module generates a private key for your account at
letsencrypt.org automatically in “$data_dir/letsencrypt/account.key“. If you
want or need to use your own account key, replace the file.

For certificate requests to work, your site needs to be accessible via plain
HTTP, see below for configuration examples in case you force your clients to
the SSL version.

After installation, trigger the cronjob `Update letsencrypt certificates` and
watch your log for messages.

Configuration
=============

This addons requests a certificate for the domain named in the configuration
parameter “web.base.url“ – if this comes back as “localhost“ or the like,
the module doesn’t request anything.

Futher self-explanatory settings are in Settings -> General Settings. There you
can add further domains to the CSR, add a custom script that updates your DNS
and add a script that will be used to reload your web server (if needed).
The number of domains that can be added to a certificate is
`capped at 100 `_. A wildcard
certificate can be used to avoid that limit.

Note that all those domains must be publicly reachable on port 80 via HTTP, and
they must have an entry for “.well-known/acme-challenge“ pointing to
“$datadir/letsencrypt/acme-challenge“ of your CBMS ODOO instance.

Since DNS changes can take some time to propagate, when we respond to a DNS challenge
and the server tries to check our response, it might fail (and probably will).
The solution to this is documented in https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc8555#section-8.2
and basically is a “Retry-After“ header under which we can instruct the server to
retry the challenge.
At the time these lines were written, Boulder had not implemented this functionality.
This prompted us to use “letsencrypt.backoff“ configuration parameter, which is the
amount of minutes this module will try poll the server to retry validating the answer
to our challenge, specifically it is the “deadline“ parameter of “poll_and_finalize“.

Usage
=====

The module sets up a cronjob that requests and renews certificates automatically.

Certificates are renewed a month before they expire. Renewal is then attempted
every day until it succeeds.

After the first run, you’ll find a file called “domain.crt“ in
“$datadir/letsencrypt“, configure your SSL proxy to use this file as certificate.

In depth configuration
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

If you want to use multiple domains on your CSR then you have to configure them
from Settings -> General Settings. If you use a wildcard in any of those domains
then letsencrypt will return a DNS challenge. In order for that challenge to be
answered you will need to **either** provide a script (as seen in General Settings)
or install a module that provides support for your DNS provider. In that module
you will need to create a function in the letsencrypt model with the name
“_respond_challenge_dns_$DNS_PROVIDER“ where “$DNS_PROVIDER“ is the name of your
provider and can be any string with length greater than zero, and add the name
of your DNS provider in the settings dns_provider selection field.

In any case if a script path is inserted in the settings page, it will be run
in case you want to update multiple DNS servers.

A reload command can be set in the Settings as well in case you need to reload
your web server. This by default is “sudo /usr/sbin/service nginx reload“

You’ll also need a matching sudo configuration, like::

your_odoo_user ALL = NOPASSWD: /usr/sbin/service nginx reload

Further, if you force users to https, you’ll need something like for nginx::

if ($scheme = “http”) {
set $redirect_https 1;
}
if ($request_uri ~ ^/.well-known/acme-challenge/) {
set $redirect_https 0;
}
if ($redirect_https) {
rewrite ^ https://$server_name$request_uri? permanent;
}

and this for apache::

RewriteEngine On
RewriteCond %{HTTPS} !=on
RewriteCond %{REQUEST_URI} “!^/.well-known/”
RewriteRule ^/?(.*) https://%{SERVER_NAME}/$1 [R,L]

In case you need to redirect other nginx sites to your CBMS ODOO instance, declare
an upstream for your CBMS ODOO instance and do something like::

location /.well-known {
proxy_pass http://yourodooupstream;
}

If you’re using a multi-database installation (with or without dbfilter option)
where /web/databse/selector returns a list of more than one database, then
you need to add “letsencrypt“ addon to wide load addons list
(by default, only “web“ addon), setting “–load“ option.
For example, “–load=web,letsencrypt“

Bug Tracker
===========

Bugs are tracked on `GitHub Issues `_.
In case of trouble, please check there if your issue has already been reported.
If you spotted it first, help us smashing it by providing a detailed and welcomed
`feedback `_.

Do not contact contributors directly about support or help with technical issues.

Credits
=======

Authors
~~~~~~~

* Therp BV
* Tecnativa
* Acysos S.L

Contributors
~~~~~~~~~~~~

* Holger Brunn
* Antonio Espinosa
* Dave Lasley
* Ronald Portier
* Ignacio Ibeas
* George Daramouskas
* Jan Verbeek

Other credits
~~~~~~~~~~~~~

ACME implementation
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

* https://github.com/certbot/certbot/tree/0.22.x/acme

Icon
~~~~

* https://helloworld.letsencrypt.org

Maintainers
~~~~~~~~~~~

This module is maintained by the OCA.

.. image:: https://odoo-community.org/logo.png
:alt: CBMS ODOO Community Association
:target: https://odoo-community.org

OCA, or the CBMS ODOO Community Association, is a nonprofit organization whose
mission is to support the collaborative development of CBMS ODOO features and
promote its widespread use.

This module is part of the `OCA/server-tools `_ project on GitHub.

You are welcome to contribute. To learn how please visit https://odoo-community.org/page/Contribute.

Compare
SKU: letsencrypt Category:

Description

Let’s Encrypt

Beta License: AGPL-3 OCA/server-tools Translate me on Weblate Try me on Runbot

This module was written to have your CBMS ODOO installation request SSL certificates
from https://letsencrypt.org automatically.

Table of contents

Installation

After installation, this module generates a private key for your account at
letsencrypt.org automatically in $data_dir/letsencrypt/account.key. If you
want or need to use your own account key, replace the file.

For certificate requests to work, your site needs to be accessible via plain
HTTP, see below for configuration examples in case you force your clients to
the SSL version.

After installation, trigger the cronjob Update letsencrypt certificates and
watch your log for messages.

Configuration

This addons requests a certificate for the domain named in the configuration
parameter web.base.url – if this comes back as localhost or the like,
the module doesn’t request anything.

Futher self-explanatory settings are in Settings -> General Settings. There you
can add further domains to the CSR, add a custom script that updates your DNS
and add a script that will be used to reload your web server (if needed).
The number of domains that can be added to a certificate is
capped at 100. A wildcard
certificate can be used to avoid that limit.

Note that all those domains must be publicly reachable on port 80 via HTTP, and
they must have an entry for .well-known/acme-challenge pointing to
$datadir/letsencrypt/acme-challenge of your CBMS ODOO instance.

Since DNS changes can take some time to propagate, when we respond to a DNS challenge
and the server tries to check our response, it might fail (and probably will).
The solution to this is documented in https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc8555#section-8.2
and basically is a Retry-After header under which we can instruct the server to
retry the challenge.
At the time these lines were written, Boulder had not implemented this functionality.
This prompted us to use letsencrypt.backoff configuration parameter, which is the
amount of minutes this module will try poll the server to retry validating the answer
to our challenge, specifically it is the deadline parameter of poll_and_finalize.

Usage

The module sets up a cronjob that requests and renews certificates automatically.

Certificates are renewed a month before they expire. Renewal is then attempted
every day until it succeeds.

After the first run, you’ll find a file called domain.crt in
$datadir/letsencrypt, configure your SSL proxy to use this file as certificate.

In depth configuration

If you want to use multiple domains on your CSR then you have to configure them
from Settings -> General Settings. If you use a wildcard in any of those domains
then letsencrypt will return a DNS challenge. In order for that challenge to be
answered you will need to either provide a script (as seen in General Settings)
or install a module that provides support for your DNS provider. In that module
you will need to create a function in the letsencrypt model with the name
_respond_challenge_dns_$DNS_PROVIDER where $DNS_PROVIDER is the name of your
provider and can be any string with length greater than zero, and add the name
of your DNS provider in the settings dns_provider selection field.

In any case if a script path is inserted in the settings page, it will be run
in case you want to update multiple DNS servers.

A reload command can be set in the Settings as well in case you need to reload
your web server. This by default is sudo /usr/sbin/service nginx reload

You’ll also need a matching sudo configuration, like:

your_odoo_user ALL = NOPASSWD: /usr/sbin/service nginx reload

Further, if you force users to https, you’ll need something like for nginx:

if ($scheme = "http") {
    set $redirect_https 1;
}
if ($request_uri ~ ^/.well-known/acme-challenge/) {
    set $redirect_https 0;
}
if ($redirect_https) {
    rewrite ^   https://$server_name$request_uri? permanent;
}

and this for apache:

RewriteEngine On
RewriteCond %{HTTPS} !=on
RewriteCond %{REQUEST_URI} "!^/.well-known/"
RewriteRule ^/?(.*) https://%{SERVER_NAME}/$1 [R,L]

In case you need to redirect other nginx sites to your CBMS ODOO instance, declare
an upstream for your CBMS ODOO instance and do something like:

location /.well-known {
    proxy_pass    http://yourodooupstream;
}

If you’re using a multi-database installation (with or without dbfilter option)
where /web/databse/selector returns a list of more than one database, then
you need to add letsencrypt addon to wide load addons list
(by default, only web addon), setting --load option.
For example, --load=web,letsencrypt

Bug Tracker

Bugs are tracked on GitHub Issues.
In case of trouble, please check there if your issue has already been reported.
If you spotted it first, help us smashing it by providing a detailed and welcomed
feedback.

Do not contact contributors directly about support or help with technical issues.

Credits

Authors

  • Therp BV
  • Tecnativa
  • Acysos S.L

Contributors

Maintainers

This module is maintained by the OCA.

CBMS ODOO Community Association

OCA, or the CBMS ODOO Community Association, is a nonprofit organization whose
mission is to support the collaborative development of CBMS ODOO features and
promote its widespread use.

This module is part of the OCA/server-tools project on GitHub.

You are welcome to contribute. To learn how please visit https://odoo-community.org/page/Contribute.

Reviews

There are no reviews yet.

Be the first to review “CBMS ERP Let’s Encrypt”

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

X

Buy product