Package consist of few CLI utilities (based on a2conf library)
a2conf
- query apache2 config (e.g. get DocumentRoot or get all hostnames for specific VirtualHost)a2certbot
- diagnose problems with Apache2 VirtualHost and LetsEncrypt certificates and make SSL sites easilya2vhost
- manipulate apache2 VirtualHostsa2okerr
- generate indicators for SSL VirtualHosts in okerr monitoring system.
Why a2utils is so great?
You can create VirtualHost right from shell:
a2vhost --basic -d example.com www.example.com --auto
or even better (create pair of http and https hosts with default auto-guessed settings and LetsEncrypt certificate):
a2vhost --both -d example.com www.example.com --auto
See all SSLCertificateFile directives for vhosts which has SSLEngine On
a2conf --cmd sslcertificatefile --filter sslengine on
See all sites and documentroot for them (better then apache2ctl -S)
a2conf --vhfmt '{vhostargs} {servername} {documentroot}'
If you created/deleted apache vhosts, but have orphaned LE certificates:
a2conf --cmd sslcertificatefile| cut -f 2 -d" " | sort | uniq > /tmp/apache-certs.txt
find /etc/letsencrypt/live/ -name fullchain.pem|sort > /tmp/le-certs.txt
diff /tmp/apache-certs.txt /tmp/le-certs.txt
Which way is easier and error-prone to request certificate?
a2certbot --create -d example.com --aliases
or
certbot certonly --webroot -w /var/www/website_1234 -d example.com -d www.example.com -d shop.example.com -d my.example.com
a2certbot reads all needed data right from apache config.
Usual simple way:
pip3 install a2utils
or get sources from git repo:
git clone https://github.com/yaroslaff/a2utils
If using git sources (without installing), work from root dir of repo and do export PYTONPATH=.
a2vhost is utility to create new http/https websites from CLI. Easy to use from your scripts.
Example uses hosts echoN.sysattack.com, but you should test with your hostname(s).
Mighty one-liner: create HTTP/HTTPS websites (http will redirect to https), obtain certificate for https. (as root)
a2vhost --both -d echo2.sysattack.com echo3.sysattack.com echo4.sysattack.com echo5.sysattack.com --auto
--both
instructs to make both https website (main) and small plain http website to handle letsencrypt verification and redirect to https.
--auto
auto-detects virtualhost config file name (you may override with -c
) and guesses and creates webroot directory if it's missing (override with -w
)
Following commands will make similar job step-by-step and without --auto
:
Create basic HTTP website
# Create files for new site
$ mkdir /var/www/virtual/echo2.sysattack.com
$ echo hello > /var/www/virtual/echo2.sysattack.com/index.html
# Create HTTP VirtualHost and test
$ a2vhost --basic -d echo2.sysattack.com echo3.sysattack.com echo4.sysattack.com -w /var/www/virtual/echo2.sysattack.com -c /etc/apache2/sites-available/echo2.sysattack.com.conf
$ a2ensite echo2.sysattack.com
$ systemctl reload apache2
$ curl http://echo2.sysattack.com/
hello
Now, lets make this site HTTPS and make new plain HTTP site which will redirect to secure HTTPS
# Generate LetsEncrypt certificate. Yes, thats very simple. We do not need --alises for this vhost, but we may need it if VirtualHost has ServerAlias'es and we want certificates for them.
$ a2certbot --create -d echo2.sysattack.com --aliases
# Convert to HTTPS
$ a2vhost --convert -d echo2.sysattack.com
# Make HTTP-to-HTTPS redirection
$ a2vhost --redirect -d echo2.sysattack.com
# Reload
$ systemctl reload apache2
# List all websites
$ a2vhost --list
In the end we got this config file
/etc/apache2/sites-enabled/echo2.sysattack.com.conf
<VirtualHost *:443>
ServerName echo2.sysattack.com
ServerAlias echo3.sysattack.com echo4.sysattack.com echo5.sysattack.com
DocumentRoot /var/www/virtual/echo2.sysattack.com
SSLEngine On
SSLCertificateFile /etc/letsencrypt/live/echo2.sysattack.com/fullchain.pem
SSLCertificateKeyFile /etc/letsencrypt/live/echo2.sysattack.com/privkey.pem
Header always set Strict-Transport-Security "max-age=31536000; includeSubDomains"
</VirtualHost>
# auto-generated plain HTTP site for redirect
<VirtualHost *:80>
ServerName echo2.sysattack.com
ServerAlias echo3.sysattack.com echo4.sysattack.com echo5.sysattack.com
DocumentRoot /var/www/virtual/echo2.sysattack.com
RewriteEngine On
RewriteCond %{HTTPS} !=on
RewriteCond %{REQUEST_URI} !^/\.well\-known
RewriteRule (.*) https://%{SERVER_NAME}$1 [R=301,L]
</VirtualHost>
Add any directive to any VirtualHost. We will add comment:
# add directive
sudo bin/a2vhost --add '# This site is main https site' -d echo2.sysattack.com --vhost '*:443'
Delete vhost:
a2vhost --delete --vhost '*:80' -d example.com
(you may add -a /etc/apache2/apache2.conf
and/or -c /etc/apache2/sites-available/example.com.conf
if your configuration is non-standard)
For all examples we will use file
examples/example.conf.
You can omit this parameter to use default /etc/apache2/apache2.conf
.
Use export PYTHONPATH=.
to use module if it's not installed.
Most useful examples:
$ bin/a2conf examples/example.conf --dump --vhost secure.example.com
# examples/example.conf:15
<VirtualHost *:443>
# SSL site
DocumentRoot /var/www/example
ServerName example.com # .... OUR TEST SITE ....
ServerAlias www.example.com 1.example.com 2.example.com secure.example.com
DirectoryIndex index.html index.htm default.htm index.php
Options -Indexes +FollowSymLinks
SSLEngine On # SSL Enabled for this virtual host
SSLCertificateFile /etc/letsencrypt/live/example.com/fullchain.pem
SSLCertificateKeyFile /etc/letsencrypt/live/example.com/privkey.pem
SSLCertificateChainFile /etc/letsencrypt/live/example.com/chain.pem
</VirtualHost>
# Only specific commands with --vhost filter
$ bin/a2conf examples/example.conf --vhost www.example.com:443 --cmd documentroot sslcertificatefile
DocumentRoot /var/www/example
SSLCertificateFile /etc/letsencrypt/live/example.com/fullchain.pem
# Same output achieved with other way of filtering (based on SSLEngine directive)
$ bin/a2conf examples/example.conf --filter sslengine on --cmd documentroot sslcertificatefile
DocumentRoot /var/www/example
SSLCertificateFile /etc/letsencrypt/live/example.com/fullchain.pem
# All hostnames configured in this config file
$ bin/a2conf examples/example.conf --cmd servername serveralias --uargs
secure.example.com example.com www.example.com 2.example.com 1.example.com
# per-vhost summary with filtering
$ bin/a2conf examples/example.conf --cmd servername serveralias --vhfmt 'Host: {servername} Root: {documentroot} Cert: {sslcertificatefile}' --filter sslcertificatefile
Host: example.com Root: /var/www/example Cert: /etc/letsencrypt/live/example.com/fullchain.pem
You can get list of all available tokens for --vhfmt
option in verbose mode (-v
option).
a2certbot utility used to quickly detect common LetsEncrypt configuration errors such as:
- DocumentRoot mismatch between VirtualHost and LetsEncrypt renew config file (e.g. if someone moved site content)
- RewriteRule or Redirect apache directives preventing verification
- DNS record points to other host or not exists at all
- And ANY OTHER problem (such as using wrong certificate path in apache or whatever).
a2certbot
simulates HTTP verification (If LetsEncrypt verification fails,a2certbot
will fail too, and vice versa).
a2certbot does not calls LetsEncrypt servers for verification, so if you will use a2certbot to verify your configuration, you will not hit failed validation limit (5 failures per account, per hostname, per hour at moment) and will not be blacklisted on LetsEncrypt site.
Before requesting new certificates:
# Verify configuration for website for which you want to request certificate for first time.
bin/a2certbot --prepare -w /var/www/virtual/static.okerr.com/ -d static.okerr.com
=== manual ===
Info:
(static.okerr.com) is local 37.59.102.26
(static.okerr.com) Vhost: /etc/apache2/sites-enabled/static.okerr.com.conf:1
(static.okerr.com) DocumentRoot: /var/www/virtual/static.okerr.com/
(static.okerr.com) DocumentRoot /var/www/virtual/static.okerr.com/ matches LetsEncrypt and Apache
(static.okerr.com) Simulated check match root: /var/www/virtual/static.okerr.com/
---
# You can verify all hostnames for site
bin/a2certbot --prepare -w /var/www/virtual/static.okerr.com/ -d static.okerr.com -d static2.okerr.com
# ... and finally simple main all-in-one command, it guesses aliases and root (command below does same as command above):
bin/a2certbot --prepare -d static.okerr.com --aliases
a2certbot can generate letsencrypt certificates in simple way (automatically detecting all aliases and DocumentRoot, but you can use -d instead of --aliases):
root@bravo:/home/xenon# a2certbot --create -d static.okerr.com --aliases
Create cert for static.okerr.com
RUNNING: certbot certonly --webroot -w /var/www/virtual/static.okerr.com/ -d static.okerr.com -d static2.okerr.com
Saving debug log to /var/log/letsencrypt/letsencrypt.log
Plugins selected: Authenticator webroot, Installer None
Obtaining a new certificate
Performing the following challenges:
http-01 challenge for static2.okerr.com
Using the webroot path /var/www/virtual/static.okerr.com for all unmatched domains.
Waiting for verification...
Cleaning up challenges
IMPORTANT NOTES:
- Congratulations! Your certificate and chain have been saved at:
...
If certbot renew
fails:
# Check (verify) ALL existing LetsEncrypt certificates (to check why 'certbot renew' may fail ):
root@bravo:/home/xenon# a2certbot
=== /etc/letsencrypt/renewal/bravo.okerr.com.conf PROBLEM ===
Info:
(bravo.okerr.com) Vhost: /etc/apache2/sites-enabled/okerr.conf:17
LetsEncrypt conf file: /etc/letsencrypt/renewal/bravo.okerr.com.conf
bravo.okerr.com is local 37.59.102.26
Problems:
No DocumentRoot in vhost at /etc/apache2/sites-enabled/okerr.conf:17
---
# Verify only one certificate
root@bravo:/home/xenon# a2certbot --host bravo.okerr.com
=== /etc/letsencrypt/renewal/bravo.okerr.com.conf PROBLEM ===
Info:
(bravo.okerr.com) Vhost: /etc/apache2/sites-enabled/okerr.conf:17
LetsEncrypt conf file: /etc/letsencrypt/renewal/bravo.okerr.com.conf
bravo.okerr.com is local 37.59.102.26
Problems:
No DocumentRoot in vhost at /etc/apache2/sites-enabled/okerr.conf:17
---
a2certbot expects that requests to .well-known directory of HTTP (port 80) virtualhost must not be redirected.
If you have redirection like this: Redirect 301 / https://example.com/
it will report problem:
Problems:
Requests will be redirected: Redirect 301 / https://www.example.com/
Actually, this could be OK (false positive) and real verification from certbot renew
may pass (if https
site has same DocumentRoot). To see if this is real problem or not see result for 'Simulated check'.
If simulated check matches - website will pass certbot verification.
To avoid such false positive, do not use such 'blind' redirection, better use this:
RewriteCond %{REQUEST_URI} !^/\.well\-known
RewriteRule (.*) https://%{SERVER_NAME}$1 [R=301,L]
This code in <VirtuaHost *:80>
context will redirect all requests to HTTPS site EXCEPT LetsEncrypt verification
requests.
a2certbotssh
is wrapper to get certificates using remote machines for verification. Remote machine must have a2utils installed.
Example:
(any machine):
bin/a2certbotssh --aliases --ssh [email protected] -d example.com
With this command it will run certbot certonly --manual ...
using itself as hooks, to place (and cleanup) validation hooks on remote machine. If --aliases
given, it will request all aliases for this virtualhost. For example, also www.example.com and new.example.com. If --test-cert
is given, staging server is used (staging server has much higher rate limits, useful for testing)
a2okerr is useful only if you are using okerr: free and open source hybrid (host/network) monitoring system.
Okerr is like nagios or zabbix, but can perform network checks from remote locations, has tiny and optional local client which can run from cron, has powerful logical indicators (notify me only if more then 2 servers are dead, notify me if any problem is not fixed for more then 30 minutes, ...), public status pages (like https://status.io/ but free), fault-tolerant sites (okerr will redirect dynamic DNS record to backup server if main server is dead, and point it back to main server when it's OK), supports Telegram and has many other nice features.
You can use it as free service (like wordpress or gmail) or you can install okerr server on your own linux machine from okerr git repository.
You will need to install small okerrupdate package to use a2okerr: pip3 install okerrupdate
.
a2okerr discovers all https sites from apache config and creates SSL-indicator in your okerr project for each website. You will get alert message to email and/or telegram if any of your https sites has any problem (certificate is not updated in time for any reason and will expire soon or already expired. Website unavailable for any reason). If you have linux server or website - you need okerr.
# Create indicator for all local https websites. If indicator already exists, HTTP error 400 will be received - this is OK.
a2okerr
# alter prefix, policy and description
a2okerr --prefix my:prefix: --policy Hourly --desc "I love okerr and a2okerr"
# do not really create indicators, just dry run
a2okerr --dry