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Signed SSL certificate: Difference between revisions
>IotaSpencer Fixed "since the root certificate is probably not known on your machine" |
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# <code>cat startssl.com.root.pem >> znc.pem</code> | # <code>cat startssl.com.root.pem >> znc.pem</code> | ||
It seems the order in your znc.pem must be "key", "own cert" and "root cert". If you get connection errors, make sure you | It seems the order in your znc.pem must be "key", "own cert" and "root cert". If you get connection errors, go back and make sure you did it right. You can test your certificate without connecting to znc with the following command: | ||
<code>openssl s_client -showcerts -connect domain.tld:6667</code> | <code>openssl s_client -showcerts -connect domain.tld:6667</code> |
Revision as of 14:53, 5 August 2014
If you're not going to be the only person using the ZNC instance, you may want to consider using signed SSL certificates. Signed SSL certificates are generated by third-party companies, such as StartSSL, PositiveSSL, VeriSign, or others, and will not cause "self-signed certificate" errors when used with an IRC client.
General advice
znc.pem
must contain everything in order from the "most private" to the "most public" key.
E.g. it may be something like this, if CA provides only 1 root cert in the chain:
cat your-certificate-private.key > znc.pem cat your-certificate.crt >> znc.pem cat ca-root.crt >> znc.pem
Below you may find more specific instructions how to configure certs from few CAs, contributed by various people.
StartSSL
If you want to use your StartSSL web server certificate in ZNC, you need to put your private key and then your certificate into ~/.znc/znc.pem:
cat server.key znc.pem > znc.pem
Remember to replace server.key and znc.pem with the correct filenames and relevant paths.
The certificate now gets validated, but the validation fails, since the root certificate is probably not known on your machine (while most browser come built-in with the root certificate). So you either make the certificate known to your machine (and all your ZNC users) or your put the root cert into your znc.pem file like the following:
cd ~/.znc/
wget https://www.startssl.com/certs/sub.class1.server.ca.pem -O startssl.com.root.pem
cat startssl.com.root.pem >> znc.pem
It seems the order in your znc.pem must be "key", "own cert" and "root cert". If you get connection errors, go back and make sure you did it right. You can test your certificate without connecting to znc with the following command:
openssl s_client -showcerts -connect domain.tld:6667
Change the domain and port to your domain and znc's listening port.
PositiveSSL
This is how I created a Positive SSL certificate for znc.
openssl req -nodes -newkey rsa:2048 -keyout myserver.key -out server.csr
- Submit server.csr to PositiveSSL
- Once you receive your SSL Bundle zip, uncompress
cat myserver.key > ~/.znc/znc.pem
cat host_domain_com.crt >> ~/.znc/znc.pem
cat PositiveSSLCA2.crt >> ~/.znc/znc.pem
cat AddTrustExternalCARoot.crt >> ~/.znc/znc.pem
That should do it. Drop a note on my Wiki Page if you need any more help.
To use a PositiveSSL, this seemed to be the recipe