| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files |
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This saves a round trip and provides a safeguard against malicious
clients.
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Passing the JWA to the ACME client is required if we want to support
account keys other than RSA. As of 0.7 both lacme-accountd(1) and
lacme(8) hardcode “RS256” (SHA256withRSA per RFC 7518 sec. A.1).
Passing the JWK thumbprint is handy as it gives more flexibility if RFC
8555 sec. 8.1 were to be updated with another digest algorithm (it's
currently hardcoded to SHA-256). A single lacme-account(1) instance
might be used to sign requests from many clients, and it's easier to
upgrade a single ‘lacme-accountd’ than many ‘lacme’. Moreover, in some
restricted environments lacme-accountd might hide the JWK from the
client to prevent ‘newAccount’ requests (such as contact updates);
passing its thumbprint is enough for ‘newOrder’ requests.
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Prefixed with a timestamp.
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Before printing them to the standard error.
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It's an internal flag, but can be useful for authorized_keys(5)
restrictions.
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lacme(8): for --config=, --socket=, --config-certs= (and ‘socket’/
‘config-certs’/‘challenge-directory’ configuration options *before*
privilege drop; and for the [accountd] section ‘command’/‘config’
configuration options *after* privilege drop).
lacme-accountd(1): for --config=, --socket= and --privkey= (and
‘socket’/‘privkey’ configuration options).
This also changes the default configuration file location. lacme(8) and
lacme-accountd(1) now respectively use /etc/lacme/lacme.conf resp.
/etc/lacme/lacme-accountd.conf when running as root, and
$XDG_CONFIG_HOME/lacme/lacme.conf resp. $XDG_CONFIG_HOME/lacme/lacme-accountd.conf
when running as a normal user. There is no fallback to /etc anymore.
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Not that it make a difference since we don't run suid.
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../../lacme/apache2.conf.
This is useful for enabling the snippet with `a2enconf lacme`, cf.
https://bugs.debian.org/955859 .
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And add a test case for this.
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Instead, treat it as an empty file. This makes it possible to use
lacme-accountd(1) without configuration file under ~/.config/lacme.
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These tests are not interactive!
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This is needed for gpg-encrypted privkeys.
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configuration file.
One need to use the lacme-accountd(1) configuration file for that
instead.
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default value.
The previous default, namely /etc/lacme/lacme-accountd.conf, is still
honored when there is the user running lacme doesn't have a
~/.config/lacme/lacme-account.conf configuration file.
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https://letsencrypt.org/docs/staging-environment/
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Cf. https://community.letsencrypt.org/t/staging-hierarchy-new-root-cert/145677 .
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To correctly extract the parent directory of the socket path. The
previous returned an empty string when the socket path didn't contain
‘/’.
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Using stdin/stdout makes it possible to tunnel the accountd connection
through ssh.
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This doesn't change the default behavior.
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directory.
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Having both lacme(8) and its webserver component reading from the same
standard input could yield starvation.
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That way users prefering that over reverse-proxying can just
source/enable the relevant files without having to uncomment
anything.
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Set $HOME, $USER, $SHELL, $PATH, $LOGNAME to appropriate values (and
perserve $TERM), which matches the login(1) behavior.
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When the accountd socket can't be reached.
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This is a breaking change: lacme(8) resp. lacme-accountd(1) no longer
consider ./lacme.conf resp. ./lacme-accountd.conf as default location
for the configuration file. Doing so has security implications when
running these program from insecure directories.
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See https://letsencrypt.org/docs/staging-environment/ .
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This is mostly useful for OCSP Must-Staple.
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