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2021-04-12caddytls: Configurable storage clean intervalMatthew Holt
Can drastically reduce costs on storage backends where scans are expensive. Also reduced default interval to 24h. See https://github.com/silinternational/certmagic-storage-dynamodb/issues/18
2021-04-01Minor tweaksMatthew Holt
2021-02-26caddypki: Add SignWithRoot option for ACME serverMatthew Holt
See https://caddy.community/t/setting-up-a-caddy-pki-based-on-a-windows- root-ca-was-getting-pki-config/11616/7 Also improved a godoc comment in the caddytls package.
2021-02-22caddytls: Remove old asset migration code (close #3894)Matthew Holt
2021-02-16Improve security warningsMatthew Holt
2021-02-10caddytls: Save email with account if not already specifiedMatthew Holt
I'm pretty sure this fixes a bug when the default email is used...
2021-02-02acmeserver: Support custom CAs from CaddyfileMatthew Holt
The HTTP Caddyfile adapter can now configure the PKI app, and the acme_server directive can now be used to specify a custom CA used for issuing certificates. More customization options can follow later as needed.
2021-02-02httpcaddyfile: Fix default issuers when email providedMatthew Holt
If `tls <email>` is used, we should apply that to all applicable default issuers, not drop them. This refactoring applies implicit ACME issuer settings from the tls directive to all default ACME issuers, like ZeroSSL. We also consolidate some annoying logic and improve config validity checks. Ref: https://caddy.community/t/error-obtaining-certificate-after-caddy-restart/11335/8
2021-01-27admin: Identity management, remote admin, config loaders (#3994)Matt Holt
This commits dds 3 separate, but very related features: 1. Automated server identity management How do you know you're connecting to the server you think you are? How do you know the server connecting to you is the server instance you think it is? Mutually-authenticated TLS (mTLS) answers both of these questions. Using TLS to authenticate requires a public/private key pair (and the peer must trust the certificate you present to it). Fortunately, Caddy is really good at managing certificates by now. We tap into that power to make it possible for Caddy to obtain and renew its own identity credentials, or in other words, a certificate that can be used for both server verification when clients connect to it, and client verification when it connects to other servers. Its associated private key is essentially its identity, and TLS takes care of possession proofs. This configuration is simply a list of identifiers and an optional list of custom certificate issuers. Identifiers are things like IP addresses or DNS names that can be used to access the Caddy instance. The default issuers are ZeroSSL and Let's Encrypt, but these are public CAs, so they won't issue certs for private identifiers. Caddy will simply manage credentials for these, which other parts of Caddy can use, for example: remote administration or dynamic config loading (described below). 2. Remote administration over secure connection This feature adds generic remote admin functionality that is safe to expose on a public interface. - The "remote" (or "secure") endpoint is optional. It does not affect the standard/local/plaintext endpoint. - It's the same as the [API endpoint on localhost:2019](https://caddyserver.com/docs/api), but over TLS. - TLS cannot be disabled on this endpoint. - TLS mutual auth is required, and cannot be disabled. - The server's certificate _must_ be obtained and renewed via automated means, such as ACME. It cannot be manually loaded. - The TLS server takes care of verifying the client. - The admin handler takes care of application-layer permissions (methods and paths that each client is allowed to use).\ - Sensible defaults are still WIP. - Config fields subject to change/renaming. 3. Dyanmic config loading at startup Since this feature was planned in tandem with remote admin, and depends on its changes, I am combining them into one PR. Dynamic config loading is where you tell Caddy how to load its config, and then it loads and runs that. First, it will load the config you give it (and persist that so it can be optionally resumed later). Then, it will try pulling its _actual_ config using the module you've specified (dynamically loaded configs are _not_ persisted to storage, since resuming them doesn't make sense). This PR comes with a standard config loader module called `caddy.config_loaders.http`. Caddyfile config for all of this can probably be added later. COMMITS: * admin: Secure socket for remote management Functional, but still WIP. Optional secure socket for the admin endpoint is designed for remote management, i.e. to be exposed on a public port. It enforces TLS mutual authentication which cannot be disabled. The default port for this is :2021. The server certificate cannot be specified manually, it MUST be obtained from a certificate issuer (i.e. ACME). More polish and sensible defaults are still in development. Also cleaned up and consolidated the code related to quitting the process. * Happy lint * Implement dynamic config loading; HTTP config loader module This allows Caddy to load a dynamic config when it starts. Dynamically-loaded configs are intentionally not persisted to storage. Includes an implementation of the standard config loader, HTTPLoader. Can be used to download configs over HTTP(S). * Refactor and cleanup; prevent recursive config pulls Identity management is now separated from remote administration. There is no need to enable remote administration if all you want is identity management, but you will need to configure identity management if you want remote administration. * Fix lint warnings * Rename identities->identifiers for consistency
2021-01-07caddytls: Configurable OCSP stapling; global option (closes #3714)Matthew Holt
Allows user to disable OCSP stapling (including support in the Caddyfile via the ocsp_stapling global option) or overriding responder URLs. Useful in environments where responders are not reachable due to firewalls.
2021-01-07httpcaddyfile: Support repeated use of cert_issuer global optionMatthew Holt
This changes the signature of UnmarshalGlobalFunc but this is probably OK since it's only used by this repo as far as we know. We need this change in order to "remember" the previous value in case a global option appears more than once, which is now a possibility with the cert_issuer option since Caddy now supports multiple issuers in the order defined by the user. Bonus: the issuer subdirective of tls now supports one-liner for "acme" when all you need to set is the directory: issuer acme <dir>
2021-01-05caddyfile: Refactor unmarshaling of module tokensMatthew Holt
Eliminates a fair amount of repeated code
2020-12-15caddytls: Improve alt chain preference settingsMatthew Holt
This allows for finer-grained control when choosing alternate chains than simply the previous/Certbot-esque behavior of "choose first chain that contains an issuer's common name." This update allows you to sort by length (if optimizing for efficiency on the wire) and also to select the chain with a specific root CommonName.
2020-12-08go.mod: Upgrade some dependenciesMatthew Holt
2020-12-02Minor commentsMatthew Holt
2020-11-25caddytls: Configure trusted CAs from PEM files (#3882)Matt Holt
Closes #3563
2020-11-22ci: Use golangci's github action for linting (#3794)Dave Henderson
* ci: Use golangci's github action for linting Signed-off-by: Dave Henderson <dhenderson@gmail.com> * Fix most of the staticcheck lint errors Signed-off-by: Dave Henderson <dhenderson@gmail.com> * Fix the prealloc lint errors Signed-off-by: Dave Henderson <dhenderson@gmail.com> * Fix the misspell lint errors Signed-off-by: Dave Henderson <dhenderson@gmail.com> * Fix the varcheck lint errors Signed-off-by: Dave Henderson <dhenderson@gmail.com> * Fix the errcheck lint errors Signed-off-by: Dave Henderson <dhenderson@gmail.com> * Fix the bodyclose lint errors Signed-off-by: Dave Henderson <dhenderson@gmail.com> * Fix the deadcode lint errors Signed-off-by: Dave Henderson <dhenderson@gmail.com> * Fix the unused lint errors Signed-off-by: Dave Henderson <dhenderson@gmail.com> * Fix the gosec lint errors Signed-off-by: Dave Henderson <dhenderson@gmail.com> * Fix the gosimple lint errors Signed-off-by: Dave Henderson <dhenderson@gmail.com> * Fix the ineffassign lint errors Signed-off-by: Dave Henderson <dhenderson@gmail.com> * Fix the staticcheck lint errors Signed-off-by: Dave Henderson <dhenderson@gmail.com> * Revert the misspell change, use a neutral English Signed-off-by: Dave Henderson <dhenderson@gmail.com> * Remove broken golangci-lint CI job Signed-off-by: Dave Henderson <dhenderson@gmail.com> * Re-add errantly-removed weakrand initialization Signed-off-by: Dave Henderson <dhenderson@gmail.com> * don't break the loop and return * Removing extra handling for null rootKey * unignore RegisterModule/RegisterAdapter Co-authored-by: Mohammed Al Sahaf <msaa1990@gmail.com> * single-line log message Co-authored-by: Matt Holt <mholt@users.noreply.github.com> * Fix lint after a1808b0dbf209c615e438a496d257ce5e3acdce2 was merged Signed-off-by: Dave Henderson <dhenderson@gmail.com> * Revert ticker change, ignore it instead Signed-off-by: Dave Henderson <dhenderson@gmail.com> * Ignore some of the write errors Signed-off-by: Dave Henderson <dhenderson@gmail.com> * Remove blank line Signed-off-by: Dave Henderson <dhenderson@gmail.com> * Use lifetime Signed-off-by: Dave Henderson <dhenderson@gmail.com> * close immediately Co-authored-by: Matt Holt <mholt@users.noreply.github.com> * Preallocate configVals Signed-off-by: Dave Henderson <dhenderson@gmail.com> * Update modules/caddytls/distributedstek/distributedstek.go Co-authored-by: Mohammed Al Sahaf <msaa1990@gmail.com> Co-authored-by: Matt Holt <mholt@users.noreply.github.com>
2020-11-16caddytls: Support multiple issuers (#3862)Matt Holt
* caddytls: Support multiple issuers Defaults are Let's Encrypt and ZeroSSL. There are probably bugs. * Commit updated integration tests, d'oh * Update go.mod
2020-11-12caddytls: Support ACME alt cert chain preferencesMatthew Holt
2020-10-22httpcaddyfile: Improve AP logic with OnDemandMatthew Holt
We have users that have site blocks like *.*.tld with on-demand TLS enabled. While *.*.tld does not qualify for a publicly-trusted cert due to its wildcards, On-Demand TLS does not actually obtain a cert with those wildcards, since it uses the actual hostname on the handshake. This improves on that logic, but I am still not 100% satisfied with the result since I think we need to also check if another site block is more specific, like foo.example.tld, which might not have on-demand TLS enabled, and make sure an automation policy gets created before the more general policy with on-demand...
2020-09-09caddytls: Fix resolvers option of acme issuer (Caddyfile)Matthew Holt
Reported in: https://caddy.community/t/dns-challenge-with-namecheap-and-split-horizon-dns/9611/17?u=matt
2020-09-08caddytls: Add `dns` config to acmeissuer (#3701)Francis Lavoie
2020-08-31caddytls: Customize DNS resolvers for DNS challenge with CaddyfileMatthew Holt
2020-08-21caddytls: Configure custom DNS resolvers for DNS challenge (close #2476)Matthew Holt
And #3391 Maybe also related: #3664
2020-08-20go.mod: Use v0.15(.1) of smallstep libsMatthew Holt
Update internal issuer for compatibility -- yay simpler code! The .1 version also fixes non-critical SAN extensions that caused trust issues on several clients.
2020-08-11caddytls: Add support for ZeroSSL; add Caddyfile support for issuers (#3633)Matt Holt
* caddytls: Add support for ZeroSSL; add Caddyfile support for issuers Configuring issuers explicitly in a Caddyfile is not easily compatible with existing ACME-specific parameters such as email or acme_ca which infer the kind of issuer it creates (this is complicated now because the ZeroSSL issuer wraps the ACME issuer)... oh well, we can revisit that later if we need to. New Caddyfile global option: { cert_issuer <name> ... } Or, alternatively, as a tls subdirective: tls { issuer <name> ... } For example, to use ZeroSSL with an API key: { cert_issuser zerossl API_KEY } For now, that still uses ZeroSSL's ACME endpoint; it fetches EAB credentials for you. You can also provide the EAB credentials directly just like any other ACME endpoint: { cert_issuer acme { eab KEY_ID MAC_KEY } } All these examples use the new global option (or tls subdirective). You can still use traditional/existing options with ZeroSSL, since it's just another ACME endpoint: { acme_ca https://acme.zerossl.com/v2/DV90 acme_eab KEY_ID MAC_KEY } That's all there is to it. You just can't mix-and-match acme_* options with cert_issuer, because it becomes confusing/ambiguous/complicated to merge the settings. * Fix broken test This test was asserting buggy behavior, oops - glad this branch both discovers and fixes the bug at the same time! * Fix broken test (post-merge) * Update modules/caddytls/acmeissuer.go Fix godoc comment Co-authored-by: Francis Lavoie <lavofr@gmail.com> * Add support for ZeroSSL's EAB-by-email endpoint Also transform the ACMEIssuer into ZeroSSLIssuer implicitly if set to the ZeroSSL endpoint without EAB (the ZeroSSLIssuer is needed to generate EAB if not already provided); this is now possible with either an API key or an email address. * go.mod: Use latest certmagic, acmez, and x/net * Wrap underlying logic rather than repeating it Oops, duh * Form-encode email info into request body for EAB endpoint Co-authored-by: Francis Lavoie <lavofr@gmail.com>
2020-07-30caddytls: Replace lego with acmez (#3621)Matt Holt
* Replace lego with acmez; upgrade CertMagic * Update integration test
2020-07-08caddytls: Move initial storage clean op into goroutineMatthew Holt
Sometimes this operation can take a while (we observed 7 minutes recently, with a large, globally-distributed storage backend).
2020-06-11caddytls: Don't decode HMACMatthew Holt
https://caddy.community/t/trouble-with-external-account-hmac/8600?u=matt
2020-06-05httpcaddyfile: Add client_auth options to tls directive (#3335)NWHirschfeld
* reading client certificate config from Caddyfile Signed-off-by: NWHirschfeld <Niclas@NWHirschfeld.de> * Update caddyconfig/httpcaddyfile/builtins.go Co-authored-by: Francis Lavoie <lavofr@gmail.com> * added adapt test for parsing client certificate configuration from Caddyfile Signed-off-by: NWHirschfeld <Niclas@NWHirschfeld.de> * read client ca and leaf certificates from file https://github.com/caddyserver/caddy/pull/3335#discussion_r421633844 Signed-off-by: NWHirschfeld <Niclas@NWHirschfeld.de> * Update modules/caddytls/connpolicy.go * Make review adjustments Co-authored-by: Francis Lavoie <lavofr@gmail.com> Co-authored-by: Matt Holt <mholt@users.noreply.github.com>
2020-06-05caddytls: Configurable cache size limitMatthew Holt
2020-06-02caddytls: Actually use configured test CAMatthew Holt
2020-06-01go.mod: Update dependenciesMatthew Holt
2020-05-12all: Recover from panics in goroutinesMatthew Holt
2020-05-06tls/client auth: verify first certificates in client request (#3344)Karol Będkowski
When client certificate is enabled Caddy check only last certificate from request. When this cert is not in list of trusted leaf certificates, connection is rejected. According to RFC TLS1.x the sender's certificate must come first in the list. Each following certificate must directly certify the one preceding it. This patch fix this problem - first certificate is checked instead of last.
2020-05-05httpcaddyfile: Only append TLS conn policy if it's non-empty (#3319)Matt Holt
This can lead to nicer, smaller JSON output for Caddyfiles like this: a { tls internal } b { tls foo@bar.com } i.e. where the tls directive only configures automation policies, and is merely meant to enable TLS on a server block (if it wasn't implied). This helps keeps implicit config implicit. Needs a little more testing to ensure it doesn't break anything important.
2020-05-05pki: Embedded ACME server (#3198)Matt Holt
* pki: Initial commit of embedded ACME server (#3021) * reverseproxy: Support auto-managed TLS client certificates (#3021) * A little cleanup after today's review session
2020-05-02caddytls: Finish upgrading to libdns DNS providers for ACME challengesMatthew Holt
Until we finish the migration to the new acme library, we have to bring the solver type in-house. It's small and temporary.
2020-05-02caddytls: Fix namespace tls.dns -> dns.providersMatthew Holt
Coulda sworn I did this already but I think I messed up my git commands
2020-04-30go.mod: Remove DNSProviderMaker interface; update to lego 3.6Matthew Holt
2020-04-30caddytls: Adjust DNS challenge structure; clarify some docsMatthew Holt
2020-04-25Fix misspelling in onDemandAskRequest error (#3308)Christoffer Andersson
2020-04-09caddytls: Don't initialize default internal issuer unless necessaryMatthew Holt
Otherwise, a password prompt can occur unnecessarily.
2020-04-08chore: make the linter happier (#3245)Mohammed Al Sahaf
* chore: make the linter happier * chore: remove reference to maligned linter in .golangci.yml
2020-04-08httpcaddyfile, caddytls: Multiple edge case fixes; add testsMatthew Holt
- Create two default automation policies; if the TLS app is used in isolation with the 'automate' certificate loader, it will now use an internal issuer for internal-only names, and an ACME issuer for all other names by default. - If the HTTP Caddyfile adds an 'automate' loader, it now also adds an automation policy for any names in that loader that do not qualify for public certificates so that they will be issued internally. (It might be nice if this wasn't necessary, but the alternative is to either make auto-HTTPS logic way more complex by scanning the names in the 'automate' loader, or to have an automation policy without an issuer switch between default issuer based on the name being issued a certificate - I think I like the latter option better, right now we do something kind of like that but at a level above each individual automation policies, we do that switch only when no automation policies match, rather than when a policy without an issuer does match.) - Set the default LoggerName rather than a LoggerNames with an empty host value, which is now taken literally rather than as a catch-all. - hostsFromKeys, the function that gets a list of hosts from server block keys, no longer returns an empty string in its resulting slice, ever.
2020-04-06caddytls: Support custom bind host for challenges (#3232)Matthew Holt
2020-04-02caddytls: Encode big.Int as string with JSONMatthew Holt
2020-04-01Fix for last commitMatthew Holt
2020-04-01caddytls: Refactor certificate selection policies (close #1575)Matthew Holt
Certificate selection used to be a module, but this seems unnecessary, especially since the built-in CustomSelectionPolicy allows quite complex selection logic on a number of fields in certs. If we need to extend that logic, we can, but I don't think there are SO many possibilities that we need modules. This update also allows certificate selection to choose between multiple matching certs based on client compatibility and makes a number of other improvements in the default cert selection logic, both here and in the latest CertMagic. The hardest part of this was the conn policy consolidation logic (Caddyfile only, of course). We have to merge connection policies that we can easily combine, because if two certs are manually loaded in a Caddyfile site block, that produces two connection policies, and each cert is tagged with a different tag, meaning only the first would ever be selected. So given the same matchers, we can merge the two, but this required improving the Tag selection logic to support multiple tags to choose from, hence "tags" changed to "any_tag" or "all_tags" (but we use any_tag in our Caddyfile logic). Combining conn policies with conflicting settings is impossible, so that should return an error if two policies with the exact same matchers have non-empty settings that are not the same (the one exception being any_tag which we can merge because the logic for them is to OR them). It was a bit complicated. It seems to work in numerous tests I've conducted, but we'll see how it pans out in the release candidates.
2020-04-01caddytls: Update cipher suite names and curve namesMatthew Holt
Now using IANA-compliant names and Go 1.14's CipherSuites() function so we don't have to maintain our own mapping of currently-secure cipher suites.