Limited DNS server with RESTful HTTP API to handle ACME DNS challenges easily and securely.
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acme-dns

A simplified DNS server with a RESTful HTTP API to provide a simple way to automate ACME DNS challenges.

Why?

Many DNS servers do not provide an API to enable automation for the ACME DNS challenges. And those which do, give the keys way too much power to leave them laying around your random boxes, which sadly would be required to have a meaningful way to automate the process.

So basically it boils down to accessibility and security

Features

  • Simplified DNS server, serving your ACME DNS challenges (TXT)
  • Custom records (have your required A, AAAA, NS, etc. records served)
  • HTTP API automatically acquires and uses Let's Encrypt TLS certificate
  • Simple deployment (it's Go after all)
  • Supports SQLite & PostgreSQL as DB backends

Usage

asciicast

Using acme-dns is a three-step process (provided you already have the server set up, or are using a service):

  • Get credentials and unique subdomain (simple GET request to https://auth.exmaple.org/register)
  • Create a (ACME magic) CNAME record to your existing zone, pointing to the subdomain you got from the registration. (eg. _acme-challenge.domainiwantcertfor.tld. CNAME a097455b-52cc-4569-90c8-7a4b97c6eba8.auth.example.org )
  • Use your credentials to POST a new DNS challenge values to an acme-dns server for the CA to validate them off of.

After that, crontab and forget.

API

Register endpoint

The method returns a new unique subdomain to point the CNAME record to, along with credentials needed to update its TXT response.

GET /register

Parameters

None

Status: 201 Created

{
    "fulldomain": "8e5700ea-a4bf-41c7-8a77-e990661dcc6a.auth.acme-dns.io",
    "password": "htB9mR9DYgcu9bX_afHF62erXaH2TS7bg9KW3F7Z",
    "subdomain": "8e5700ea-a4bf-41c7-8a77-e990661dcc6a",
    "username": "c36f50e8-4632-44f0-83fe-e070fef28a10"
}

Update endpoint

The method allows you to update the TXT answer contents of your unique subdomain. Usually carried automatically by automated ACME client.

POST /update

Required headers

Header name Description Example
X-Api-User UUIDv4 username recieved from registration X-Api-User: c36f50e8-4632-44f0-83fe-e070fef28a10
X-Api-Key Password recieved from registration X-Api-Key: htB9mR9DYgcu9bX_afHF62erXaH2TS7bg9KW3F7Z

Example input

{
    "subdomain": "8e5700ea-a4bf-41c7-8a77-e990661dcc6a",
    "txt": "______my_43_char_dns_validation_token______"
}

Response

Status: 200 OK

{
    "txt": "______my_43_char_dns_validation_token______"
}

Self-hosted

You are encouraged to run your own acme-dns instance, because you are effectively authorizing the acme-dns server to act on your behalf in providing the answer to challengeing CA, making the instance able to request (and get issued) a TLS certificate for the domain that has CNAME pointing to it.

Check out how in the INSTALL section.

As a service

I am running an acme-dns instance as a service for everyone wanting to get on in fast. The service is running at auth.acme-dns.io, so to get started, try: curl -X GET https://auth.acme-dns.io/register

Installation

  1. Install Go

  2. Clone this repo: git clone https://github.com/joohoi/acme-dns $GOPATH/src/acme-dns

  3. Install govendor. go get -u github.com/kardianos/govendor . This is used for dependency handling.

  4. Get dependencies: cd $GOPATH/src/acme-dns and govendor sync

  5. Build ACME-DNS: go build

  6. Edit config.cfg to suit your needs (see configuration)

  7. Run acme-dns. Please note that acme-dns needs to open a privileged port (53, domain), so it needs to be run with according privileges.

Configuration

[general]
# dns interface
listen = ":53"
# protocol, "udp", "udp4", "udp6" or "tcp", "tcp4", "tcp6"
protocol = "udp"
# domain name to serve th requests off of 
domain = "auth.example.org"
# zone name server 
nsname = "ns1.auth.example.org"
# admin email address, with @ substituted with .
nsadmin = "admin.example.org"
# predefined records that we're serving in addition to the TXT
records = [
    # default A
    "auth.example.org. A 192.168.1.100",
    # A 
    "ns1.auth.example.org. A 192.168.1.100",
    "ns2.auth.example.org. A 192.168.1.100",
    # NS
    "auth.example.org. NS ns1.auth.example.org.",
    "auth.example.org. NS ns2.auth.example.org.",
]
# debug messages from CORS etc
debug = false

[database]
# Database engine to use, sqlite3 or postgres
engine = "sqlite3"
# Connection string, filename for sqlite3 and postgres://$username:$password@$host/$db_name for postgres
connection = "acme-dns.db"
# connection = "postgres://user:password@localhost/acmedns_db"

[api]
# domain name to listen requests for, mandatory if using tls = "letsencrypt"
api_domain = ""
# listen port, eg. 443 for default HTTPS
port = "8080"
# possible values: "letsencrypt", "cert", "none"
tls = "none"
# only used if tls = "cert"
tls_cert_privkey = "/etc/tls/example.org/privkey.pem"
tls_cert_fullchain = "/etc/tls/example.org/fullchain.pem"
# CORS AllowOrigins, wildcards can be used
corsorigins = [
    "*"
]

[logconfig]
# logging level: "error", "warning", "info" or "debug"
loglevel = "debug"
# possible values: stdout, TODO file & integrations
logtype = "stdout"
# file path for logfile TODO
# logfile = "./acme-dns.log"
# format, either "json" or "text" 
logformat = "text"

TODO

  • Ability to POST to /register endpoint, giving users the possibility to define CIDR masks to restrict the /update requests for the created user / key to.
  • Want to see something implemented, make a feature request!

Contributing

acme-dns is open for contributions. If you have an improvement, please open a Pull Request.

License

acme-dns is released under the MIT License.