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Let's Encrypt Certificates for Turris Omnia

This config utilises the Acme.sh client to issue Let's Encrypt certificates for use wtih the Turris Omnia web interface.

If you're looking to issue and manage just a single certificate within OpenWrt, see the official, packaged-based solution at https://github.com/acmesh-official/acme.sh/wiki/How-to-run-on-OpenWRT.

Adapted in part from the instructions at https://doc.turris.cz/doc/en/public/letencrypt_turris_lighttpd for improved security and simplicity; this setup should work fine for other OpenWrt devices using lighttpd.

Key features

  • Uses Acme.sh client for free TLS certificates from Let's Encrypt

  • Uses hook scripts to simplify issue and renewal process

  • Opportunistically opens and closes firewall port 80

  • Restarts lighttpd to deploy certificates

  • Configures lighttpd for TLSv1.3 only following the Mozilla SSL Configuration Generator.

  • Disables lighttpd from running insecurely on port 80

    • HSTS handles the odd case where you forget or are too lazy to type in the https:// at the start. Just load the https:// URL once and your browser will remember for you forever.

Installation

This installs the project and files in /srv, which is the default path for external storage on a Turris device, but you can install wherever you'd like.

  1. Download this project:

    opkg install git-http
    git clone https://github.com/davidjb/turris-omnia-tls.git /srv/turris-omnia-tls
    
  2. Determine the latest version of acme.sh by checking https://github.com/acmesh-official/acme.sh/releases. Note the release version (which is the tag name); you'll use it in the next step, substituting for [VERSION].

  3. Install acme.sh client and its dependency, socat; taking care to substitute [VERSION] and [YOUREMAIL] with correct values:

    opkg install socat
    git clone https://github.com/acmesh-official/acme.sh -b [VERSION] /srv/acme.sh
    cd /srv/acme.sh
    ./acme.sh --install --home /srv/.acme.sh --nocron --email [YOUREMAIL] --set-default-ca --server letsencrypt
    
  4. Disable the existing SSL configuration by removing the lighttpd-https-cert package:

    opkg remove lighttpd-https-cert
    
  5. Stop updater from automatically reinstalling the lighttpd-https-cert package:

    cp /srv/turris-omnia-tls/updater_custom.lua /etc/updater/conf.d/no-upstream-ssl.lua
    
  6. Make sure the lighttpd-mod-openssl package is installed:

    opkg install lighttpd-mod-openssl
    
  7. Lighttpd needs to stop listening on port 80 so modify /etc/lighttpd/conf.d/90-turris-root.conf to comment out these lines:

    $SERVER["socket"] == "*:80"    {  }
    $SERVER["socket"] == "[::]:80" {   }
    
  8. Stop lighttpd; we will enable it again shortly:

    /etc/init.d/lighttpd stop
    
  9. Issue the certificate, taking care to specify your FQDN in place of [YOUR.DOMAIN.COM]:

    /srv/turris-omnia-tls/cert-issue.sh [YOUR.DOMAIN.COM]
    
  10. Reconfigure lighttpd with the supplied custom configuration:

    cp /srv/turris-omnia-tls/lighttpd_custom.conf /etc/lighttpd/conf.d/40-ssl-acme-enable.conf
    

    Inside this file, replace the domain.example.com placeholders with your FQDN. You can do this automatically by running the following command, again taking care to specify your FQDN in place of [YOUR.DOMAIN.COM]:

    sed -i 's/domain.example.com/[YOUR.DOMAIN.COM]/g' /etc/lighttpd/conf.d/40-ssl-acme-enable.conf
    
  11. Restart lighttpd:

    /etc/init.d/lighttpd start
    
  12. Add crontab entry for renewal; pick a random minute and hour:

    echo '34 0 * * * /srv/turris-omnia-tls/cert-renew.sh > /dev/null' >> /etc/crontabs/root
    

    The renewal process will automatically re-use the settings for certificates that were issued.

Issuing more certificates

Run the following:

/srv/turris-omnia-tls/cert-issue.sh extra.example.com

Note that this will automatically configure relevant hooks to run before and after certificate issuance. If you want to adjust this behaviour your can either copy and customise the command inside cert-issue.sh before you run it the first time or go and modify the configuration that acme.sh generates in /etc/lighttpd/certs/extra.example.com/extra.example.com.conf, where extra.example.com is the name of your domain.

Upgrading acme.sh

Run the following; after fetching, you'll see the latest version tag:

cd /srv/acme.sh
git fetch
git checkout [VERSION]
./acme.sh --install --home /srv/.acme.sh --nocron

License

MIT. See LICENSE.txt.

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Let's Encrypt TLS certificate configuration for the Turris Omnia

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