After playing with the letsencrypt client, I found a nice way to automate certificates generation and renewal. I am using nginx here, but any webserver can work. This method does not involve any proxying to the letsencrypt command or automated nginx config modification, so it is quite safe.

Latest version will be available in this gist : https://gist.github.com/renchap/c093702f06df69ba5cac#file-readme-md

Prerequisites : the letsencrypt CLI tool

This method allows your to generate and renew your Lets Encrypt certificates with 1 command. This is easily automatable to renew each 60 days, as advised.

You need nginx to answer on port 80 on all the domains you want a certificate for. Then you need to serve the challenge used by letsencrypt on /.well-known/acme-challenge .

Then we invoke the letsencrypt command, telling the tool to write the challenge files in the directory we used as a root in the nginx configuration.

I redirect all HTTP requests on HTTPS, so my nginx config looks like :

server { listen 80; listen [::]:80; server_name example.net example.org; location '/.well-known/acme-challenge' { default_type "text/plain"; root /tmp/letsencrypt-auto; } location / { return 301 https://$server_name$request_uri; } }

This approatch allows me do no longer needing to do any nginx config change if I add a new domain and use server_name *; , I create a new certificate with the needed hostname, and add the new vhost for this domain listening on 443 only using the newly generated certificate.

Then, to generate your initial certificate for those domains :

$ export DOMAINS="-d example.net -d example.org" $ export DIR=/tmp/letsencrypt-auto $ mkdir -p $DIR && letsencrypt certonly --server https://acme-v01.api.letsencrypt.org/directory -a webroot --webroot-path=$DIR --agree-dev-preview $DOMAINS $ service nginx reload

The command will output the path to the signed certificate, and you can add it to your nginx configuration as usual. The private key is located in the same directory than the generated fullchain.pem

A Lets Encrypt cert is valid for 90 days, it is recommended to renew every 60 days. Automation is needed here to avoid any expired certificate !

To renew your certificate (in a cron job for example), call the same command with a --renew arg :

$ export DOMAINS="-d example.net -d example.org" $ export DIR=/tmp/letsencrypt-auto $ mkdir -p $DIR && letsencrypt --renew certonly --server https://acme-v01.api.letsencrypt.org/directory -a webroot --webroot-path=$DIR --agree-dev-preview $DOMAINS $ service nginx reload