Commit Graph

13 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Matthew Holt
3a6496c268
tls: Support distributed solving of the HTTP-01 challenge
Caddy can now obtain certificates when behind load balancers and/or in
fleet/cluster configurations, without needing any extra configuration.
The only requirement is sharing the same $CADDYPATH/acme folder.
This works with the HTTP challenge, whereas before the DNS challenge
was required. This commit allows one Caddy instance to initiate the
HTTP challenge and another to complete it.

When sharing that folder, certificate management is synchronized and
coordinated, without the Caddy instances needing to know about each
other. No load balancer reconfiguration should be required, either.

Currently, this is only supported when using FileStorage for TLS
storage (which is ~99.999% of users).
2018-03-15 19:30:45 -06:00
Matthew Holt
6f78cc49d1
tls: Initial transition to ACMEv2 and support automatic wildcard certs
- Using xenolf/lego's likely-temporary acmev2 branch
- Cleaned up vendor folder a little bit (probably more to do)
- Temporarily set default CA URL to v2 staging endpoint
- Refactored user management a bit; updated tests (biggest change is
  how we get the email address, which now requires being able to make
  an ACME client with a User with a private key so that we can get the
  current ToS URL)
- Automatic HTTPS now allows specific wildcard pattern hostnames
- Commented out (but kept) the TLS-SNI code, as the challenge type
  may return in the future in a similar form
2018-03-14 21:44:08 -06:00
Matthew Holt
fc2ff9155c
tls: Restructure and improve certificate management
- Expose the list of Caddy instances through caddy.Instances()

- Added arbitrary storage to caddy.Instance

- The cache of loaded certificates is no longer global; now scoped
  per-instance, meaning upon reload (like SIGUSR1) the old cert cache
  will be discarded entirely, whereas before, aggressively reloading
  config that added and removed lots of sites would cause unnecessary
  build-up in the cache over time.

- Key certificates in the cache by their SHA-256 hash instead of
  by their names. This means certificates will not be duplicated in
  memory (within each instance), making Caddy much more memory-efficient
  for large-scale deployments with thousands of sites sharing certs.

- Perform name-to-certificate lookups scoped per caddytls.Config instead
  of a single global lookup. This prevents certificates from stepping on
  each other when they overlap in their names.

- Do not allow TLS configurations keyed by the same hostname to be
  different; this now throws an error.

- Updated relevant tests, with a stark awareness that more tests are
  needed.

- Change the NewContext function signature to include an *Instance.

- Strongly recommend (basically require) use of caddytls.NewConfig()
  to create a new *caddytls.Config, to ensure pointers to the instance
  certificate cache are initialized properly.

- Update the TLS-SNI challenge solver (even though TLS-SNI is disabled
  currently on the CA side). Store temporary challenge cert in instance
  cache, but do so directly by the ACME challenge name, not the hash.
  Modified the getCertificate function to check the cache directly for
  a name match if one isn't found otherwise. This will allow any
  caddytls.Config to be able to help solve a TLS-SNI challenge, with one
  extra side-effect that might actually be kind of interesting (and
  useless): clients could send a certificate's hash as the SNI and
  Caddy would be able to serve that certificate for the handshake.

- Do not attempt to match a "default" (random) certificate when SNI
  is present but unrecognized; return no certificate so a TLS alert
  happens instead.

- Store an Instance in the list of instances even while the instance
  is still starting up (this allows access to the cert cache for
  performing renewals at startup, etc). Will be removed from list again
  if instance startup fails.

- Laid groundwork for ACMEv2 and Let's Encrypt wildcard support.

Server type plugins will need to be updated slightly to accommodate
minor adjustments to their API (like passing in an Instance). This
commit includes the changes for the HTTP server.

Certain Caddyfile configurations might error out with this change, if
they configured different TLS settings for the same hostname.

This change trades some complexity for other complexity, but ultimately
this new complexity is more correct and robust than earlier logic.

Fixes #1991
Fixes #1994
Fixes #1303
2018-02-04 00:58:27 -07:00
Matthew Holt
baf6db5b57
Apply Apache license to all .go source files (closes #1865)
I am not a lawyer, but according to the appendix of the license,
these boilerplate notices should be included with every source file.
2017-09-22 23:56:58 -06:00
bamling
a368230ba5 caddytls: introduced own ChallengeProvider type to fix imports related to vendor (#1700)
* introduced own ChallengeProvider type, based on acme.ChallengeProvider to avoid vendoring/version mismatches in Caddy plugins; see Caddy issue #1697

* fixed up comments for ChallengeProvider

* moved ChallengeProvider to caddytls/tls.go
2017-06-06 09:23:00 -06:00
Matthew Holt
6bc3e7536e
tls: Command line flags to disable HTTP and TLS-SNI challenges
This could have just as easily been a tls directive property in the
Caddyfile, but I figure if these challenges are being disabled, it's
because of port availability or process privileges, both of which would
affect all sites served by this process. The names of the flag are long
but descriptive.

I've never needed this but I hear of quite a few people who say they
need this ability, so here it is.
2017-03-08 00:06:49 -07:00
Matthew Holt
8ecd543519
Refactor and improve TLS storage code (related to locking) 2016-09-19 17:24:34 -06:00
Luna Duclos
1dfe1e5ada Add plugin capabilities for tls storage.
To use a plugged in storage, specify "storage storage_name" in the tls block of the Caddyfile, by default, file storage will be used
2016-08-23 23:00:20 +02:00
Matthew Holt
502a8979a8 Propagate DNS provider plugins to caddy package so -plugins shows them 2016-07-15 21:29:06 -06:00
Chad Retz
88a2811e2a Pluggable TLS Storage (#913)
* Initial concept for pluggable storage (sans tests and docs)

* Add TLS storage docs, test harness, and minor clean up from code review

* Fix issue with caddymain's temporary moveStorage

* Formatting improvement on struct array literal by removing struct name

* Pluggable storage changes:

* Change storage interface to persist all site or user data in one call
* Add lock/unlock calls for renewal and cert obtaining

* Key fields on composite literals
2016-07-08 07:32:31 -06:00
Matthew Holt
2b06edccd3
Use challenge domain for tls-sni solver
Matches the new upstream function signature and fixes previously broken
behavior; new solver code confirmed to work during restarts
2016-06-13 17:48:59 -06:00
Matthew Holt
e7fc26e3fb
Improved godoc, added two missing directives, update change log 2016-06-07 09:27:14 -06:00
Matthew Holt
ac4fa2c3a9
Rewrote Caddy from the ground up; initial commit of 0.9 branch
These changes span work from the last ~4 months in an effort to make
Caddy more extensible, reduce the coupling between its components, and
lay a more robust foundation of code going forward into 1.0. A bunch of
new features have been added, too, with even higher future potential.

The most significant design change is an overall inversion of
dependencies. Instead of the caddy package knowing about the server
and the notion of middleware and config, the caddy package exposes an
interface that other components plug into. This does introduce more
indirection when reading the code, but every piece is very modular and
pluggable. Even the HTTP server is pluggable.

The caddy package has been moved to the top level, and main has been
pushed into a subfolder called caddy. The actual logic of the main
file has been pushed even further into caddy/caddymain/run.go so that
custom builds of Caddy can be 'go get'able.

The HTTPS logic was surgically separated into two parts to divide the
TLS-specific code and the HTTPS-specific code. The caddytls package can
now be used by any type of server that needs TLS, not just HTTP. I also
added the ability to customize nearly every aspect of TLS at the site
level rather than all sites sharing the same TLS configuration. Not all
of this flexibility is exposed in the Caddyfile yet, but it may be in
the future. Caddy can also generate self-signed certificates in memory
for the convenience of a developer working on localhost who wants HTTPS.
And Caddy now supports the DNS challenge, assuming at least one DNS
provider is plugged in.

Dozens, if not hundreds, of other minor changes swept through the code
base as I literally started from an empty main function, copying over
functions or files as needed, then adjusting them to fit in the new
design. Most tests have been restored and adapted to the new API,
but more work is needed there.

A lot of what was "impossible" before is now possible, or can be made
possible with minimal disruption of the code. For example, it's fairly
easy to make plugins hook into another part of the code via callbacks.
Plugins can do more than just be directives; we now have plugins that
customize how the Caddyfile is loaded (useful when you need to get your
configuration from a remote store).

Site addresses no longer need be just a host and port. They can have a
path, allowing you to scope a configuration to a specific path. There is
no inheretance, however; each site configuration is distinct.

Thanks to amazing work by Lucas Clemente, this commit adds experimental
QUIC support. Turn it on using the -quic flag; your browser may have
to be configured to enable it.

Almost everything is here, but you will notice that most of the middle-
ware are missing. After those are transferred over, we'll be ready for
beta tests.

I'm very excited to get this out. Thanks for everyone's help and
patience these last few months. I hope you like it!!
2016-06-04 17:00:29 -06:00