<p>A TLS (formerly called SSL) certificate is a cryptographic file that proves to anyone connecting to a web address that the connection is secure between you and the owner of that address.</p>
<p>You need a TLS certificate for this box’s hostname ({{hostname}}) and every other domain name and subdomain that this box is hosting a website for (see the list below).</p>
<p>A TLS certificate can be automatically provisioned from <ahref="https://letsencrypt.org/"target="_blank">Let’s Encrypt</a>, a free TLS certificate provider, for:<br>
<pstyle="margin-top: 1.5em">Certificates expire after a period of time. All certificates will be automatically renewed through <ahref="https://letsencrypt.org/"target="_blank">Let’s Encrypt</a> 14 days prior to expiration.</p>
<p>If you don't want to use our automatic Let's Encrypt integration, you can give any other certificate provider a try. You can generate the needed CSR below.</p>
<p>What country are you in? This is required by some TLS certificate providers. You may leave this blank if you know your TLS certificate provider doesn't require it.</p>
<p>The certificate provider will then provide you with a TLS/SSL certificate. They may also provide you with an intermediate chain. Paste each separately into the boxes below:</p>
show_modal_error("TLS Certificate Installation", "Certificate has been installed. Check that you have no connection problems to the domain.", function() { show_ssl(); $('#csr_info').slideUp(); });
// Nothing was done. There might also be problem domains, but we've already displayed those.
if (status.requests.length == 0) {
show_modal_error("TLS Certificate Provisioning", "There were no domain names to provision certificates for.");
// don't return - haven't re-enabled the provision button
}
// Each provisioning API call returns zero or more "requests" which represent
// a request to Let's Encrypt for a single certificate. Normally there is just
// one request (for a single multi-domain certificate).
for (var i = 0; i <status.requests.length;i++){
var r = status.requests[i];
// create an HTML block to display the results of this request
var n = $("<div><h4/><p/></div>");
$('#ssl_provision_result').append(n);
// show a header only to disambiguate request blocks
if (status.requests.length > 0)
n.find("h4").text(r.domains.join(", "));
if (r.result == "agree-to-tos") {
// user needs to agree to Let's Encrypt's TOS
agree_to_tos_url_prompt = r.url;
$('#ssl_provision_p .btn').attr('disabled', '1');
n.find("p").html("Please open and review <ahref='" + r.url + "'target='_blank'>Let's Encrypt's terms of service agreement</a>. You must agree to their terms for a certificate to be automatically provisioned from them.");
n.append($('<buttononclick="agree_to_tos_url = agree_to_tos_url_prompt; return provision_tls_cert();"class="btn btn-success"style="margin-left: 2em">Agree & Try Again</button>'));
// don't re-enable the Provision button -- user must use the Agree button
// Show a button that counts down to zero, at which point it becomes enabled.
n.find("p").text("A certificate is now in the process of being provisioned, but it takes some time. Please wait until the Finish button is enabled, and then click it to acquire the certificate.");
var b = $('<buttononclick="return provision_tls_cert();"class="btn btn-success"style="margin-left: 2em">Finish</button>');
// don't re-enable the Provision button -- user must use the Retry button when it becomes enabled
may_reenable_provision_button = false;
} else if (r.result == "installed") {
n.find("p").addClass("text-success").text("The TLS certificate was provisioned and installed.");
setTimeout("show_tls(true)", 1); // update main table of certificate statuses, call with arg keep_provisioning_shown true so that we don't clear what we just outputted