certbot formerly letsencrypt client for Lets Encrypt Certificates

Edit Package certbot
https://certbot.eff.org/

ATTENTION: Version 1.23.0 is the last version which can be use in Leap.
Version >= 1.24 need python3 >= 3.7

Certbot (previously, the Let's Encrypt client) is an easy-to-use automatic client that fetches and deploys
SSL/TLS certificates for your webserver.
Certbot was developed by EFF and others as a client for Let’s Encrypt and was previously known as
“the official Let’s Encrypt client” or “the Let’s Encrypt Python client.”
Certbot will also work with any other CAs that support the ACME protocol.

While there are many other clients that implement the ACME protocol to fetch certificates, Certbot is the
most extensive client and can automatically configure your webserver to start serving over HTTPS immediately.
For Apache, it can also optionally automate security tasks such as tuning ciphersuites and enabling important
security features such as HTTP → HTTPS redirects, OCSP stapling, HSTS, and upgrade-insecure-requests.

Certbot is part of EFF’s larger effort to encrypt the entire Internet. Websites need to use HTTPS to secure
the web. Along with HTTPS Everywhere, Certbot aims to build a network that is more structurally private,
safe, and protected against censorship.

Refresh
Refresh
Source Files
Filename Size Changed
README.SUSE 0000001749 1.71 KB
certbot-2.10.0.tar.gz 0002322931 2.22 MB
certbot-cli.ini.patch 0000001950 1.9 KB
certbot-fix_constants.patch 0000026515 25.9 KB
certbot-repoze.sphinx.autointerface.patch 0000000435 435 Bytes
certbot.changes 0000079743 77.9 KB
certbot.cron 0000000949 949 Bytes
certbot.rpmlintrc 0000000195 195 Bytes
certbot.spec 0000023844 23.3 KB
Latest Revision
Eric Schirra's avatar Eric Schirra (ecsos) committed (revision 230)
- Update to 2.10.0
  * Added
    - The Python source packages which we upload to PyPI are
      now also being uploaded to
      our releases on GitHub where
      we now also include a SHA256SUMS checksum file and a PGP signature for that
      file.
Comments 2

Yunhe Guo's avatar

Does it make sense to use systemd instead of cron? It will be easier to enable/disable in YaST and monitor errors.


Eric Schirra's avatar

I am not a friend of systemd. And certainly not from systemd cron. Sorry.

openSUSE Build Service is sponsored by