How can I see all domains in my SSL certificate made by Certbot?
found it. The command that lists all certificates and a list of domains for each of them. $ sudo certbot certificates
found it. The command that lists all certificates and a list of domains for each of them. $ sudo certbot certificates
It turns out that if my Apache conf file 000-default.conf only declares <VirtualHost *:80>…</VirtualHost>, then Certbot duplicates it and creates a second Apache conf file called 000-default-le-ssl.conf to define <VirtualHost *:443>…</VirtualHost>. The Name duplicates previous WSGI daemon definition error appears because both Apache conf files have the same line defining WSGIDaemonProcess myprocess…. This appears to … Read more
Not sure how I missed this. From the install docs https://certbot.eff.org/docs/install.html#certbot-auto user@webserver:~$ wget https://dl.eff.org/certbot-auto user@webserver:~$ chmod a+x ./certbot-auto user@webserver:~$ ./certbot-auto –help
With certbot, you can simply use: certbot delete –cert-name mywebsite.com This removes the certificate and all relevant files from your letsencrypt config directory.
I was trying to create Let’s Encrypt certificate using certbot for my sub-domain and had the following issue. Command: ubuntu@localhost:~$ certbot –nginx -d my_subdomain.website.com -d my_subdomain2.website.com Issue: The requested Nginx plugin does not appear to be installed Solution: Ubuntu 20+ ubuntu@localhost:~$ sudo apt-get install python3-certbot-nginx Earlier Versions ubuntu@localhost:~$ sudo apt-get install python-certbot-nginx
You can run certbot ‘silently’ by adding the following options: –non-interactive –agree-tos -m webmaster@example.com The full list of config options is available here: https://certbot.eff.org/docs/using.html
I got rid of the error message on Ubuntu 20.04 by removing the ppa repository. It took me a long time to find out the exact command argument, so this might help others :-). I used the command: sudo apt-add-repository -r ppa:certbot/certbot After that, the following commands do not generate any errors: sudo apt update … Read more
Renew a single certificate using renew with the –cert-name option. (certonly creates a certificate for one or more domains, replacing it if exists). Example certbot renew –cert-name domain1.com –dry-run Remove –dry-run to actually renew. Cert-name != Domain name Note that the value supplied to –cert-name option is a certificate name (not a domain name) found … Read more