Certbot/Anwendung

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Certbot/Anwendung

Beschreibung

Certbot can obtain and install HTTPS/TLS/SSL certificates. By default, it will attempt to use a webserver both for obtaining and installing the certificate. The most common SUBCOMMANDS and flags are:

obtain, install, and renew certificates

Befehl Beschreibung
(default) run Obtain & install a certificate in your current webserver
certonly Obtain or renew a certificate, but do not install it
renew Renew all previously obtained certificates that are near expiry
enhance Add security enhancements to your existing configuration
-d DOMAINS Comma-separated list of domains to obtain a certificate for
--apache Use the Apache plugin for authentication & installation
--standalone Run a standalone webserver for authentication
--nginx Use the Nginx plugin for authentication & installation
--webroot Place files in a server's webroot folder for authentication
--manual Obtain certificates interactively, or using shell script hooks
-n Run non-interactively
--test-cert Obtain a test certificate from a staging server
--dry-run Test "renew" or "certonly" without saving any certificates to disk

manage certificates

Aufgabe Befehl
certificates Display information about certificates you have from Certbot
revoke Revoke a certificate (supply --cert-name or --cert-path)
delete Delete a certificate (supply --cert-name)

manage your account

Aufgabe Befehl
register Create an ACME account
unregister Deactivate an ACME account
update_account Update an ACME account
show_account Display account details
--agree-tos Agree to the ACME server's Subscriber Agreement
-m EMAIL Email address for important account notifications

optional arguments

Unix GNU Beschreibung
-h --help show this help message and exit
-c CONFIG_FILE --config CONFIG_FILE path to config file (default: /etc/letsencrypt/cli.ini and ~/.config/letsencrypt/cli.ini)
-v --verbose This flag can be used multiple times to incrementally increase the verbosity of output, e.g. -vvv. (default:0)
--max-log-backups MAX_LOG_BACKUPS Specifies the maximum number of backup logs that should be kept by Certbot's built in log rotation. Setting this flag to 0 disables log rotation entirely, causing Certbot to always append to the same log file. (default: 1000)
-n --non-interactive --noninteractive Run without ever asking for user input. This may require additional command line flags; the client will try to explain which ones are required if it finds one missing (default: False)
--force-interactive Force Certbot to be interactive even if it detects it's not being run in a terminal. This flag cannot be used with the renew subcommand. (default: False)
-d DOMAIN --domain DOMAIN --domain DOMAIN Domain names to apply. For multiple domains you can use multiple -d flags or enter a comma separated list of domains as a parameter. The first domain provided will be the subject CN of the certificate, and all domains will be Subject Alternative Names on the certificate. The first domain will also be used in some software user interfaces and as the file paths for the certificate and related material unless otherwise specified or you already have a certificate with the same name. In the case of a name collision it will append a number like 0001 to the file path name.(default: Ask)
--eab-kid EAB_KID Key Identifier for External Account Binding (default: None)
--eab-hmac-key EAB_HMAC_KEY HMAC key for External Account Binding (default: None)
--cert-name CERTNAME Certificate name to apply. This name is used by Certbot for housekeeping and in file paths; it doesn't affect the content of the certificate itself. To see certificate names, run 'certbot certificates'. When creating a new certificate, specifies the new certificate's name. (default: the first provided domain or the name of an existing certificate on your system for the same domains)
--dry-run Perform a test run of the client, obtaining test (invalid) certificates but not saving them to disk. This can currently only be used with the 'certonly' and 'renew' subcommands. Note: Although --dry-run tries to avoid making any persistent changes on a system, it is not completely side-effect free: if used with webserver authenticator plugins like apache and nginx, it makes and then reverts temporary config changes in order to obtain test certificates, and reloads webservers to deploy and then roll back those changes. It also calls --pre-hook and --post-hook commands if they are defined because they may be necessary to accurately simulate renewal. --deploy-hook commands are not called. (default: False)
--debug-challenges After setting up challenges, wait for user input before submitting to CA. When used in combination with the `-v` option, the challenge URLs or FQDNs and their expected return values are shown. (default: False)
--preferred-chain PREFERRED_CHAIN Set the preferred certificate chain. If the CA offers multiple certificate chains, prefer the chain whose topmost certificate was issued from this Subject Common Name. If no match, the default offered chain will be used. (default: None)
--preferred-challenges PREF_CHALLS A sorted, comma delimited list of the preferred challenge to use during authorization with the most preferred challenge listed first (Eg, "dns" or "http,dns"). Not all plugins support all challenges. See https://certbot.eff.org/docs/using.html#plugins for details. ACME Challenges are versioned, but if you pick "http" rather than "http-01", Certbot will select the latest version automatically. (default: [])
--issuance-timeout ISSUANCE_TIMEOUT This option specifies how long (in seconds) Certbot will wait for the server to issue a certificate. (default: 90)
--user-agent USER_AGENT Set a custom user agent string for the client. User agent strings allow the CA to collect high level statistics about success rates by OS, plugin and use case, and to know when to deprecate support for past Python versions and flags. If you wish to hide this information from the Let's Encrypt server, set this to "". (default: CertbotACMEClient/1.24.0 (certbot; OS_NAME OS_VERSION) Authenticator/XXX Installer/YYY (SUBCOMMAND; flags: FLAGS) Py/major.minor.patchlevel). The flags encoded in the user agent are: --duplicate,
--force-renew --allow-subset-of-names -n, and whether any hooks are set.
--user-agent-comment USER_AGENT_COMMENT Add a comment to the default user agent string. May be used when repackaging Certbot or calling it from another tool to allow additional statistical data to be collected. Ignored if --user-agent is set. (Example: Foo-Wrapper/1.0) (default: None)

automation

 Flags for automating execution & other tweaks
 --keep-until-expiring, --keep, --reinstall
                       If the requested certificate matches an existing
                       certificate, always keep the existing one until it is
                       due for renewal (for the 'run' subcommand this means
                       reinstall the existing certificate). (default: Ask)
 --expand              If an existing certificate is a strict subset of the
                       requested names, always expand and replace it with the
                       additional names. (default: Ask)
 --version             show program's version number and exit
 --force-renewal, --renew-by-default
                       If a certificate already exists for the requested
                       domains, renew it now, regardless of whether it is
                       near expiry. (Often --keep-until-expiring is more
                       appropriate). Also implies --expand. (default: False)
 --renew-with-new-domains
                       If a certificate already exists for the requested
                       certificate name but does not match the requested
                       domains, renew it now, regardless of whether it is
                       near expiry. (default: False)
 --reuse-key           When renewing, use the same private key as the
                       existing certificate. (default: False)
 --no-reuse-key        When renewing, do not use the same private key as the
                       existing certificate. Not reusing private keys is the
                       default behavior of Certbot. This option may be used
                       to unset --reuse-key on an existing certificate.
                       (default: False)
 --allow-subset-of-names
                       When performing domain validation, do not consider it
                       a failure if authorizations can not be obtained for a
                       strict subset of the requested domains. This may be
                       useful for allowing renewals for multiple domains to
                       succeed even if some domains no longer point at this
                       system. This option cannot be used with --csr.
                       (default: False)
 --agree-tos           Agree to the ACME Subscriber Agreement (default: Ask)
 --duplicate           Allow making a certificate lineage that duplicates an
                       existing one (both can be renewed in parallel)
                       (default: False)
 -q, --quiet           Silence all output except errors. Useful for
                       automation via cron. Implies --non-interactive.
                       (default: False)

security

 Security parameters & server settings
 --rsa-key-size N      Size of the RSA key. (default: 2048)
 --key-type {rsa,ecdsa}
                       Type of generated private key. Only *ONE* per
                       invocation can be provided at this time. (default:
                       rsa)
 --elliptic-curve N    The SECG elliptic curve name to use. Please see RFC
                       8446 for supported values. (default: secp256r1)
 --must-staple         Adds the OCSP Must Staple extension to the
                       certificate. Autoconfigures OCSP Stapling for
                       supported setups (Apache version >= 2.3.3 ). (default:
                       False)
 --redirect            Automatically redirect all HTTP traffic to HTTPS for
                       the newly authenticated vhost. (default: redirect
                       enabled for install and run, disabled for enhance)
 --no-redirect         Do not automatically redirect all HTTP traffic to
                       HTTPS for the newly authenticated vhost. (default:
                       redirect enabled for install and run, disabled for
                       enhance)
 --hsts                Add the Strict-Transport-Security header to every HTTP
                       response. Forcing browser to always use SSL for the
                       domain. Defends against SSL Stripping. (default: None)
 --uir                 Add the "Content-Security-Policy: upgrade-insecure-
                       requests" header to every HTTP response. Forcing the
                       browser to use https:// for every http:// resource.
                       (default: None)
 --staple-ocsp         Enables OCSP Stapling. A valid OCSP response is
                       stapled to the certificate that the server offers
                       during TLS. (default: None)
 --strict-permissions  Require that all configuration files are owned by the
                       current user; only needed if your config is somewhere
                       unsafe like /tmp/ (default: False)
 --auto-hsts           Gradually increasing max-age value for HTTP Strict
                       Transport Security security header (default: False)

testing

 The following flags are meant for testing and integration purposes only.
 --test-cert, --staging
                       Use the staging server to obtain or revoke test
                       (invalid) certificates; equivalent to --server
                       https://acme-staging-v02.api.letsencrypt.org/directory
                       (default: False)
 --debug               Show tracebacks in case of errors (default: False)
 --no-verify-ssl       Disable verification of the ACME server's certificate.
                       (default: False)
 --http-01-port HTTP01_PORT
                       Port used in the http-01 challenge. This only affects
                       the port Certbot listens on. A conforming ACME server
                       will still attempt to connect on port 80. (default:
                       80)
 --http-01-address HTTP01_ADDRESS
                       The address the server listens to during http-01
                       challenge. (default: )
 --https-port HTTPS_PORT
                       Port used to serve HTTPS. This affects which port
                       Nginx will listen on after a LE certificate is
                       installed. (default: 443)
 --break-my-certs      Be willing to replace or renew valid certificates with
                       invalid (testing/staging) certificates (default:
                       False)

paths

 Flags for changing execution paths & servers
 --cert-path CERT_PATH
                       Path to where certificate is saved (with certonly
                       --csr), installed from, or revoked (default: None)
 --key-path KEY_PATH   Path to private key for certificate installation or
                       revocation (if account key is missing) (default: None)
 --fullchain-path FULLCHAIN_PATH
                       Accompanying path to a full certificate chain
                       (certificate plus chain). (default: None)
 --chain-path CHAIN_PATH
                       Accompanying path to a certificate chain. (default:
                       None)
 --config-dir CONFIG_DIR
                       Configuration directory. (default: /etc/letsencrypt)
 --work-dir WORK_DIR   Working directory. (default: /var/lib/letsencrypt)
 --logs-dir LOGS_DIR   Logs directory. (default: /var/log/letsencrypt)
 --server SERVER       ACME Directory Resource URI. (default:
                       https://acme-v02.api.letsencrypt.org/directory)

manage

 Various subcommands and flags are available for managing your
 certificates:
 certificates          List certificates managed by Certbot
 delete                Clean up all files related to a certificate
 renew                 Renew all certificates (or one specified with --cert-
                       name)
 revoke                Revoke a certificate specified with --cert-path or
                       --cert-name
 update_symlinks       Recreate symlinks in your /etc/letsencrypt/live/
                       directory

run

 Options for obtaining & installing certificates

certonly

 Options for modifying how a certificate is obtained
 --csr CSR             Path to a Certificate Signing Request (CSR) in DER or
                       PEM format. Currently --csr only works with the
                       'certonly' subcommand. (default: None)

renew

 The 'renew' subcommand will attempt to renew any certificates previously
 obtained if they are close to expiry, and print a summary of the results.
 By default, 'renew' will reuse the plugins and options used to obtain or
 most recently renew each certificate. You can test whether future renewals
 will succeed with `--dry-run`. Individual certificates can be renewed with
 the `--cert-name` option. Hooks are available to run commands before and
 after renewal; see https://certbot.eff.org/docs/using.html#renewal for
 more information on these.
 --pre-hook PRE_HOOK   Command to be run in a shell before obtaining any
                       certificates. Intended primarily for renewal, where it
                       can be used to temporarily shut down a webserver that
                       might conflict with the standalone plugin. This will
                       only be called if a certificate is actually to be
                       obtained/renewed. When renewing several certificates
                       that have identical pre-hooks, only the first will be
                       executed. (default: None)
 --post-hook POST_HOOK
                       Command to be run in a shell after attempting to
                       obtain/renew certificates. Can be used to deploy
                       renewed certificates, or to restart any servers that
                       were stopped by --pre-hook. This is only run if an
                       attempt was made to obtain/renew a certificate. If
                       multiple renewed certificates have identical post-
                       hooks, only one will be run. (default: None)
 --deploy-hook DEPLOY_HOOK
                       Command to be run in a shell once for each
                       successfully issued certificate. For this command, the
                       shell variable $RENEWED_LINEAGE will point to the
                       config live subdirectory (for example,
                       "/etc/letsencrypt/live/example.com") containing the
                       new certificates and keys; the shell variable
                       $RENEWED_DOMAINS will contain a space-delimited list
                       of renewed certificate domains (for example,
                       "example.com www.example.com" (default: None)
 --disable-hook-validation
                       Ordinarily the commands specified for --pre-
                       hook/--post-hook/--deploy-hook will be checked for
                       validity, to see if the programs being run are in the
                       $PATH, so that mistakes can be caught early, even when
                       the hooks aren't being run just yet. The validation is
                       rather simplistic and fails if you use more advanced
                       shell constructs, so you can use this switch to
                       disable it. (default: False)
 --no-directory-hooks  Disable running executables found in Certbot's hook
                       directories during renewal. (default: False)
 --disable-renew-updates
                       Disable automatic updates to your server configuration
                       that would otherwise be done by the selected installer
                       plugin, and triggered when the user executes "certbot
                       renew", regardless of if the certificate is renewed.
                       This setting does not apply to important TLS
                       configuration updates. (default: False)
 --no-autorenew        Disable auto renewal of certificates. (default: True)

certificates

 List certificates managed by Certbot

delete

 Options for deleting a certificate

revoke

 Options for revocation of certificates
 --reason {unspecified,keycompromise,affiliationchanged,superseded,cessationofoperation}
                       Specify reason for revoking certificate. (default:
                       unspecified)
 --delete-after-revoke
                       Delete certificates after revoking them, along with
                       all previous and later versions of those certificates.
                       (default: None)
 --no-delete-after-revoke
                       Do not delete certificates after revoking them. This
                       option should be used with caution because the 'renew'
                       subcommand will attempt to renew undeleted revoked
                       certificates. (default: None)

register

 Options for account registration
 --register-unsafely-without-email
                       Specifying this flag enables registering an account
                       with no email address. This is strongly discouraged,
                       because you will be unable to receive notice about
                       impending expiration or revocation of your
                       certificates or problems with your Certbot
                       installation that will lead to failure to renew.
                       (default: False)
 -m EMAIL, --email EMAIL
                       Email used for registration and recovery contact. Use
                       comma to register multiple emails, ex:
                       u1@example.com,u2@example.com. (default: Ask).
 --eff-email           Share your e-mail address with EFF (default: None)
 --no-eff-email        Don't share your e-mail address with EFF (default:
                       None)

update_account

 Options for account modification

unregister

 Options for account deactivation.
 --account ACCOUNT_ID  Account ID to use (default: None)

install

 Options for modifying how a certificate is deployed

rollback

 Options for rolling back server configuration changes
 --checkpoints N       Revert configuration N number of checkpoints.
                       (default: 1)

plugins

 Options for the "plugins" subcommand
 --init                Initialize plugins. (default: False)
 --prepare             Initialize and prepare plugins. (default: False)
 --authenticators      Limit to authenticator plugins only. (default: None)
 --installers          Limit to installer plugins only. (default: None)

update_symlinks

 Recreates certificate and key symlinks in /etc/letsencrypt/live, if you
 changed them by hand or edited a renewal configuration file

enhance

 Helps to harden the TLS configuration by adding security enhancements to
 already existing configuration.

show_account

 Options useful for the "show_account" subcommand:

plugins

 Plugin Selection: Certbot client supports an extensible plugins
 architecture. See 'certbot plugins' for a list of all installed plugins
 and their names. You can force a particular plugin by setting options
 provided below. Running --help <plugin_name> will list flags specific to
 that plugin.
 --configurator CONFIGURATOR
                       Name of the plugin that is both an authenticator and
                       an installer. Should not be used together with
                       --authenticator or --installer. (default: Ask)
 -a AUTHENTICATOR, --authenticator AUTHENTICATOR
                       Authenticator plugin name. (default: None)
 -i INSTALLER, --installer INSTALLER
                       Installer plugin name (also used to find domains).
                       (default: None)
 --apache              Obtain and install certificates using Apache (default:
                       False)
 --nginx               Obtain and install certificates using Nginx (default:
                       False)
 --standalone          Obtain certificates using a "standalone" webserver.
                       (default: False)
 --manual              Provide laborious manual instructions for obtaining a
                       certificate (default: False)
 --webroot             Obtain certificates by placing files in a webroot
                       directory. (default: False)
 --dns-cloudflare      Obtain certificates using a DNS TXT record (if you are
                       using Cloudflare for DNS). (default: False)
 --dns-cloudxns        Obtain certificates using a DNS TXT record (if you are
                       using CloudXNS for DNS). (default: False)
 --dns-digitalocean    Obtain certificates using a DNS TXT record (if you are
                       using DigitalOcean for DNS). (default: False)
 --dns-dnsimple        Obtain certificates using a DNS TXT record (if you are
                       using DNSimple for DNS). (default: False)
 --dns-dnsmadeeasy     Obtain certificates using a DNS TXT record (if you are
                       using DNS Made Easy for DNS). (default: False)
 --dns-gehirn          Obtain certificates using a DNS TXT record (if you are
                       using Gehirn Infrastructure Service for DNS).
                       (default: False)
 --dns-google          Obtain certificates using a DNS TXT record (if you are
                       using Google Cloud DNS). (default: False)
 --dns-linode          Obtain certificates using a DNS TXT record (if you are
                       using Linode for DNS). (default: False)
 --dns-luadns          Obtain certificates using a DNS TXT record (if you are
                       using LuaDNS for DNS). (default: False)
 --dns-nsone           Obtain certificates using a DNS TXT record (if you are
                       using NS1 for DNS). (default: False)
 --dns-ovh             Obtain certificates using a DNS TXT record (if you are
                       using OVH for DNS). (default: False)
 --dns-rfc2136         Obtain certificates using a DNS TXT record (if you are
                       using BIND for DNS). (default: False)
 --dns-route53         Obtain certificates using a DNS TXT record (if you are
                       using Route53 for DNS). (default: False)
 --dns-sakuracloud     Obtain certificates using a DNS TXT record (if you are
                       using Sakura Cloud for DNS). (default: False)

apache

 Apache Web Server plugin (Please note that the default values of the
 Apache plugin options change depending on the operating system Certbot is
 run on.)
 --apache-enmod APACHE_ENMOD
                       Path to the Apache 'a2enmod' binary (default: None)
 --apache-dismod APACHE_DISMOD
                       Path to the Apache 'a2dismod' binary (default: None)
 --apache-le-vhost-ext APACHE_LE_VHOST_EXT
                       SSL vhost configuration extension (default: -le-
                       ssl.conf)
 --apache-server-root APACHE_SERVER_ROOT
                       Apache server root directory (default: /etc/apache2)
 --apache-vhost-root APACHE_VHOST_ROOT
                       Apache server VirtualHost configuration root (default:
                       None)
 --apache-logs-root APACHE_LOGS_ROOT
                       Apache server logs directory (default:
                       /var/log/apache2)
 --apache-challenge-location APACHE_CHALLENGE_LOCATION
                       Directory path for challenge configuration (default:
                       /etc/apache2)
 --apache-handle-modules APACHE_HANDLE_MODULES
                       Let installer handle enabling required modules for you
                       (Only Ubuntu/Debian currently) (default: False)
 --apache-handle-sites APACHE_HANDLE_SITES
                       Let installer handle enabling sites for you (Only
                       Ubuntu/Debian currently) (default: False)
 --apache-ctl APACHE_CTL
                       Full path to Apache control script (default:
                       apache2ctl)
 --apache-bin APACHE_BIN
                       Full path to apache2/httpd binary (default: None)

dns-cloudflare

 Obtain certificates using a DNS TXT record (if you are using Cloudflare
 for DNS).
 --dns-cloudflare-propagation-seconds DNS_CLOUDFLARE_PROPAGATION_SECONDS
                       The number of seconds to wait for DNS to propagate
                       before asking the ACME server to verify the DNS
                       record. (default: 10)
 --dns-cloudflare-credentials DNS_CLOUDFLARE_CREDENTIALS
                       Cloudflare credentials INI file. (default: None)

dns-cloudxns

 Obtain certificates using a DNS TXT record (if you are using CloudXNS for
 DNS).
 --dns-cloudxns-propagation-seconds DNS_CLOUDXNS_PROPAGATION_SECONDS
                       The number of seconds to wait for DNS to propagate
                       before asking the ACME server to verify the DNS
                       record. (default: 30)
 --dns-cloudxns-credentials DNS_CLOUDXNS_CREDENTIALS
                       CloudXNS credentials INI file. (default: None)

dns-digitalocean

 Obtain certificates using a DNS TXT record (if you are using DigitalOcean
 for DNS).
 --dns-digitalocean-propagation-seconds DNS_DIGITALOCEAN_PROPAGATION_SECONDS
                       The number of seconds to wait for DNS to propagate
                       before asking the ACME server to verify the DNS
                       record. (default: 10)
 --dns-digitalocean-credentials DNS_DIGITALOCEAN_CREDENTIALS
                       DigitalOcean credentials INI file. (default: None)

dns-dnsimple

 Obtain certificates using a DNS TXT record (if you are using DNSimple for
 DNS).
 --dns-dnsimple-propagation-seconds DNS_DNSIMPLE_PROPAGATION_SECONDS
                       The number of seconds to wait for DNS to propagate
                       before asking the ACME server to verify the DNS
                       record. (default: 30)
 --dns-dnsimple-credentials DNS_DNSIMPLE_CREDENTIALS
                       DNSimple credentials INI file. (default: None)

dns-dnsmadeeasy

 Obtain certificates using a DNS TXT record (if you are using DNS Made Easy
 for DNS).
 --dns-dnsmadeeasy-propagation-seconds DNS_DNSMADEEASY_PROPAGATION_SECONDS
                       The number of seconds to wait for DNS to propagate
                       before asking the ACME server to verify the DNS
                       record. (default: 60)
 --dns-dnsmadeeasy-credentials DNS_DNSMADEEASY_CREDENTIALS
                       DNS Made Easy credentials INI file. (default: None)

dns-gehirn

 Obtain certificates using a DNS TXT record (if you are using Gehirn
 Infrastructure Service for DNS).
 --dns-gehirn-propagation-seconds DNS_GEHIRN_PROPAGATION_SECONDS
                       The number of seconds to wait for DNS to propagate
                       before asking the ACME server to verify the DNS
                       record. (default: 30)
 --dns-gehirn-credentials DNS_GEHIRN_CREDENTIALS
                       Gehirn Infrastructure Service credentials file.
                       (default: None)

dns-google

 Obtain certificates using a DNS TXT record (if you are using Google Cloud
 DNS for DNS).
 --dns-google-propagation-seconds DNS_GOOGLE_PROPAGATION_SECONDS
                       The number of seconds to wait for DNS to propagate
                       before asking the ACME server to verify the DNS
                       record. (default: 60)
 --dns-google-credentials DNS_GOOGLE_CREDENTIALS
                       Path to Google Cloud DNS service account JSON file.
                       (See https://developers.google.com/identity/protocols/
                       OAuth2ServiceAccount#creatinganaccount forinformation
                       about creating a service account and
                       https://cloud.google.com/dns/access-
                       control#permissions_and_roles for information about
                       therequired permissions.) (default: None)

dns-linode

 Obtain certificates using a DNS TXT record (if you are using Linode for
 DNS).
 --dns-linode-propagation-seconds DNS_LINODE_PROPAGATION_SECONDS
                       The number of seconds to wait for DNS to propagate
                       before asking the ACME server to verify the DNS
                       record. (default: 120)
 --dns-linode-credentials DNS_LINODE_CREDENTIALS
                       Linode credentials INI file. (default: None)

dns-luadns

 Obtain certificates using a DNS TXT record (if you are using LuaDNS for
 DNS).
 --dns-luadns-propagation-seconds DNS_LUADNS_PROPAGATION_SECONDS
                       The number of seconds to wait for DNS to propagate
                       before asking the ACME server to verify the DNS
                       record. (default: 30)
 --dns-luadns-credentials DNS_LUADNS_CREDENTIALS
                       LuaDNS credentials INI file. (default: None)

dns-nsone

 Obtain certificates using a DNS TXT record (if you are using NS1 for DNS).
 --dns-nsone-propagation-seconds DNS_NSONE_PROPAGATION_SECONDS
                       The number of seconds to wait for DNS to propagate
                       before asking the ACME server to verify the DNS
                       record. (default: 30)
 --dns-nsone-credentials DNS_NSONE_CREDENTIALS
                       NS1 credentials file. (default: None)

dns-ovh

 Obtain certificates using a DNS TXT record (if you are using OVH for DNS).
 --dns-ovh-propagation-seconds DNS_OVH_PROPAGATION_SECONDS
                       The number of seconds to wait for DNS to propagate
                       before asking the ACME server to verify the DNS
                       record. (default: 30)
 --dns-ovh-credentials DNS_OVH_CREDENTIALS
                       OVH credentials INI file. (default: None)

dns-rfc2136

 Obtain certificates using a DNS TXT record (if you are using BIND for
 DNS).
 --dns-rfc2136-propagation-seconds DNS_RFC2136_PROPAGATION_SECONDS
                       The number of seconds to wait for DNS to propagate
                       before asking the ACME server to verify the DNS
                       record. (default: 60)
 --dns-rfc2136-credentials DNS_RFC2136_CREDENTIALS
                       RFC 2136 credentials INI file. (default: None)

dns-route53

 Obtain certificates using a DNS TXT record (if you are using AWS Route53
 for DNS).
 --dns-route53-propagation-seconds DNS_ROUTE53_PROPAGATION_SECONDS
                       The number of seconds to wait for DNS to propagate
                       before asking the ACME server to verify the DNS
                       record. (default: 10)

dns-sakuracloud

 Obtain certificates using a DNS TXT record (if you are using Sakura Cloud
 for DNS).
 --dns-sakuracloud-propagation-seconds DNS_SAKURACLOUD_PROPAGATION_SECONDS
                       The number of seconds to wait for DNS to propagate
                       before asking the ACME server to verify the DNS
                       record. (default: 90)
 --dns-sakuracloud-credentials DNS_SAKURACLOUD_CREDENTIALS
                       Sakura Cloud credentials file. (default: None)

manual

 Authenticate through manual configuration or custom shell scripts. When
 using shell scripts, an authenticator script must be provided. The
 environment variables available to this script depend on the type of
 challenge. $CERTBOT_DOMAIN will always contain the domain being
 authenticated. For HTTP-01 and DNS-01, $CERTBOT_VALIDATION is the
 validation string, and $CERTBOT_TOKEN is the filename of the resource
 requested when performing an HTTP-01 challenge. An additional cleanup
 script can also be provided and can use the additional variable
 $CERTBOT_AUTH_OUTPUT which contains the stdout output from the auth
 script. For both authenticator and cleanup script, on HTTP-01 and DNS-01
 challenges, $CERTBOT_REMAINING_CHALLENGES will be equal to the number of
 challenges that remain after the current one, and $CERTBOT_ALL_DOMAINS
 contains a comma-separated list of all domains that are challenged for the
 current certificate.
 --manual-auth-hook MANUAL_AUTH_HOOK
                       Path or command to execute for the authentication
                       script (default: None)
 --manual-cleanup-hook MANUAL_CLEANUP_HOOK
                       Path or command to execute for the cleanup script
                       (default: None)

nginx

 Nginx Web Server plugin
 --nginx-server-root NGINX_SERVER_ROOT
                       Nginx server root directory. (default: /etc/nginx or
                       /usr/local/etc/nginx)
 --nginx-ctl NGINX_CTL
                       Path to the 'nginx' binary, used for 'configtest' and
                       retrieving nginx version number. (default: nginx)
 --nginx-sleep-seconds NGINX_SLEEP_SECONDS
                       Number of seconds to wait for nginx configuration
                       changes to apply when reloading. (default: 1)

null

 Null Installer

standalone

 Spin up a temporary webserver

webroot

 Place files in webroot directory
 --webroot-path WEBROOT_PATH, -w WEBROOT_PATH
                       public_html / webroot path. This can be specified
                       multiple times to handle different domains; each
                       domain will have the webroot path that preceded it.
                       For instance: `-w /var/www/example -d example.com -d
                       www.example.com -w /var/www/thing -d thing.net -d
                       m.thing.net` (default: Ask)
 --webroot-map WEBROOT_MAP
                       JSON dictionary mapping domains to webroot paths; this
                       implies -d for each entry. You may need to escape this
                       from your shell. E.g.: --webroot-map
                       '{"eg1.is,m.eg1.is":"/www/eg1/", "eg2.is":"/www/eg2"}'
                       This option is merged with, but takes precedence over,
                       -w / -d entries. At present, if you put webroot-map in
                       a config file, it needs to be on a single line, like:
                       webroot-map = {"example.com":"/var/www"}. (default:
                       {})