lego/docs/content/usage/cli/Options.md
Ludovic Fernandez 3cefc7a51b
chore: fix grammar and typo (#1978)
Co-authored-by: Dominik Menke <git@dmke.org>
2023-07-29 12:59:24 +02:00

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title date draft summary weight
Options 2019-03-03T16:39:46+01:00 false This page describes various command line options. 4

Usage

{{< clihelp >}}

When using the standard --path option, all certificates and account configurations are saved to a folder .lego in the current working directory.

Let's Encrypt ACME server

lego defaults to communicating with the production Let's Encrypt ACME server. If you'd like to test something without issuing real certificates, consider using the staging endpoint instead:

lego --server=https://acme-staging-v02.api.letsencrypt.org/directory …

Running without root privileges

The CLI does not require root permissions but needs to bind to port 80 and 443 for certain challenges. To run the CLI without sudo, you have four options:

  • Use setcap 'cap_net_bind_service=+ep' /path/to/lego (Linux only)
  • Pass the --http.port or/and the --tls.port option and specify a custom port to bind to. In this case you have to forward port 80/443 to these custom ports (see Port Usage).
  • Pass the --http.webroot option and specify the path to your webroot folder. In this case the challenge will be written in a file in .well-known/acme-challenge/ inside your webroot.
  • Pass the --dns option and specify a DNS provider.

Port Usage

By default, lego assumes it is able to bind to ports 80 and 443 to solve challenges. If this is not possible in your environment, you can use the --http.port and --tls.port options to instruct lego to listen on that interface:port for any incoming challenges.

If you are using either of these options, make sure you setup a proxy to redirect traffic to the chosen ports.

HTTP Port: All plaintext HTTP requests to port 80 which begin with a request path of /.well-known/acme-challenge/ for the HTTP challenge1.

TLS Port: All TLS handshakes on port 443 for the TLS-ALPN challenge.

This traffic redirection is only needed as long as lego solves challenges. As soon as you have received your certificates you can deactivate the forwarding.

DNS Resolvers and Challenge Verification

When using a DNS challenge provider (via --dns <name>), Lego tries to ensure the ACME challenge token is properly setup before instructing the ACME provider to perform the validation.

This involves a few DNS queries to different servers:

  1. Determining the DNS zone and resolving CNAMEs.

    The DNS zone for a given domain is determined by the SOA record, which contains the authoritative name server for the domain and all its subdomains. For simple domains like example.com, this is usually example.com itself. For other domains (like fra.eu.cdn.example.com), this can get complicated, as cdn.example.com may be delegated to the CDN provider, which means for cdn.example.com must exist a different SOA record.

    To find the correct zone, Lego requests the SOA record for each DNS label (starting on the leaf domain, i.e. the left-most DNS label). If there is no SOA record, Lego requests the SOA record of the parent label, then for its parent, etc., until it reaches the apex domain2. Should any DNS label on the way be a CNAME, it is resolved as per usual.

    In the default configuration, Lego uses the system name servers for this, and falls back to Google's DNS servers, should they be absent.

  2. Verifying the challenge token.

    The _acme-challenge.<yourdomain> TXT record must be correctly installed. Lego verifies this by directly querying the authoritative name server for this record (as detected in the previous step).

Strictly speaking, this verification step is not necessary, but helps to protect your ACME account. Remember that some ACME providers impose a rate limit on certain actions (at the time of writing, Let's Encrypt allows 300 new certificate orders per account per 3 hours).

There are also situations, where this verification step doesn't work as expected:

  • A "split DNS" setup gives different answers to clients on the internal network (Lego) vs. on the public internet (Let's Encrypt).
  • With "hidden master" setups, Lego may be able to directly talk to the primary DNS server, while the _acme-challenge record might not have fully propagated to the (public) secondary servers, yet.

The effect is the same: Lego determined the challenge token to be installed correctly, while Let's Encrypt has a different view, and rejects the certificate order.

In these cases, you can instruct Lego to use a different DNS resolver, using the --dns.resolvers flag. You should prefer one on the public internet, otherwise you might be susceptible to the same problem.


  1. You must ensure that incoming validation requests contains the correct value for the HTTP Host header. If you operate lego behind a non-transparent reverse proxy (such as Apache or NGINX), you might need to alter the header field using --http.proxy-header X-Forwarded-Host. ↩︎

  2. The apex domain is the domain you have registered with your domain registrar. For gTLDs (.com, .fyi) this is the 2nd level domain, but for ccTLDs, this can either be the 2nd level (.de) or 3rd level domain (.co.uk). ↩︎