This webpage provides instructions for using the acme-dns DNS challenge method with various ACME clients to obtain HTTPS certificates for private networks. Caddy, Traefik, cert-manager, acme.sh, LEGO and Certify The Web are listed as ACME clients that support acme-dns. For each client, configuration examples are provided that show how to set API credentials and other settings to use the acme-dns service at https://api.getlocalcert.net/api/v1/acme-dns-compat to obtain certificates. Interesting that so many ACME clients support the acme-dns service, providing an easy way to obtain HTTPS certificates for private networks.

HN https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=36674224

seiferteric: Proposes an idea for automatically creating trusted certificates for new devices on a private network.

hartmel: Mentions SCEP which allows automatic certificate enrollment for network devices.

mananaysiempre: Thinks using EJBCA for this, as hartmel suggested, adds unnecessary complexity.

8organicbits: Describes a solution using getlocalcert which issues certificates for anonymous domain names.

austin-cheney: Has a solution using TypeScript that checks for existing certificates and creates them if needed, installing them in the OS and browser.

bruce511: Says automating the process is possible.

lolinder: Mentions Caddy will automatically create and manage certificates for local domains.

frfl: Uses Lego to get a Let’s Encrypt certificate for a local network website using the DNS challenge.

donselaar: Recommends DANE which works well for private networks without a public CA, but lacks browser support.

  • @thedaly@reseed.it
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    71 year ago

    Big fan of letsencrypt’s certbot with the nginx and cloudflare (or other dns providers) plugins.

    Is there any reason to use caddy or traefik over nginx?

    • @danA
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      131 year ago

      Because you might want to use HTTPS on a server that’s not accessible externally. Some browser features only work over HTTPS.

        • @jarfil@beehaw.org
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          1 year ago

          Good browsers don’t let random unauthenticated content to do whatever it wants on neither the local machine or the network.

          HTTPS is also the only way to use client-side certificates for strong two-way authentication and zero-trust setups.

          • @zergling_man@lemmy.perthchat.org
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            11 year ago

            Good browsers don’t let random unauthenticated content to do whatever it wants on neither the local machine or the network.

            So, lynx?

            zero-trust setups. private networks

            • @jarfil@beehaw.org
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              21 year ago

              lynx, no-script… it’s all fine until some web needs JavaScript yes or yes, which nowadays seem to be most of them, then it’s a game of whom to trust.

              Private networks are usually an oxymoron, they’re only as private as far as the WiFi router or whoever clicks the wrong malicious link go. Zero-trust mitigates that, instead of blindly relying on perimeter defenses and trusting anyone who manages to bypass them.

  • @pe1uca@lemmy.pe1uca.dev
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    41 year ago

    Yep, caddy was as easy as to use xcaddy with the module of my DNS, configure the key and run caddy, that’s it xD.

    For what lolinder mentioned in the news link you need to have port 80 open.
    If you don’t want that you could configure local authority, but that’ll give the warning of a selfsigned certificate.

  • @xthexder@l.sw0.com
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    31 year ago

    Personally I use dnsrobocert with my own domains. I’ve got a few subdomains that point to a Wireguard subnet IP for private network apps (so it resolves to nothing if you’re not on VPN). Having a real valid SSL cert is really nice vs self signing, and it keeps my browser with HTTPS-Everywhere happy.

  • @GameGod@beehaw.org
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    11 year ago

    IMHO all these approaches are convoluted and introduce way too many components (SPOFs) to solve the problem. They’re “free” but they come at the cost of maintaining all this extra infrastructure and don’t forget that certificate transparency logs mean all your internal DNS records that you request a LetsEncrypt certificate for will be published publicly. (!)

    An alternative approach is to set up your own internal certificate authority (CA), which you can do in a couple minutes with step-ca. You then just deploy your CA root cert to all the machines on your network and can get certs whenever you need. If you want to go the extra mile and set up automatic renewal, you can do that too, but it’s overkill for internal use IMHO.

    Using your own CA introduces only a single new software component and it doesn’t require high availability to be useful…