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    SSL certs handling and HAproxy

    General pfSense Questions
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    • L
      lewis
      last edited by

      I wonder if it has something to do with the fact that the cert is being handled by ACME but once the browser hits the web server, that has it's own self signed cert so maybe a mismatch?

      However, I cannot fire up the service without a cert if I allow https connections so added teh self signed cert.
      Why is this so complicated? No wonder I wasn't able to follow any article I could find to get this working.

      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • L
        lewis
        last edited by

        Weird, searching online for help on this leads to so many things but mostly, our own thread now.
        I cannot find anything that helps me to solve this.

        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • L
          lewis
          last edited by

          One thing I notice is that even with the 'production' setting, the re-generated cert always shows staging;
          issuer=C = US, O = (STAGING) Let's Encrypt, CN = (STAGING) Artificial Apricot R3

          When I re-issue and it shows the green page, there is no mention of staging anywhere.

          It's nuts how many articles contradict each other when trying to find anything on this.

          kiokomanK 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • kiokomanK
            kiokoman LAYER 8 @lewis
            last edited by

            @lewis
            7bacddb7-ecdf-4af5-8c9c-21989cd0e535-image.png

            so you have registered for production

            now you should see something with Issuer

            Acmecert: O=Let's Encrypt, CN=R3, C=US

            under system / certificates /certificates

            if you see it than you need to go to haproxy and change, under ssl offloading , the certificate

            bdfab39a-df00-4fa2-982d-7857d337b6c6-image.png

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            • L
              lewis
              last edited by lewis

              Holy crap, I finally got it working.
              I don't even know where to start to show what I did because I tried so many things.
              The last thing I did was in the backend, changing the server list Table from port 80 to port 443 and enabling Encrypt(SSL).

              The main problem I have now is still not knowing what the correct configuration of the web server should be.
              It's using a self signed cert now but this is a stand alone web server. Some of them have lots of virtualhosts.

              And, what SSL options will be used? The ones on ACME/haproxy or the ones set in ssl.conf/httpd.conf on the web server?

              Plus, now I'd like to fix the 'load balanced' server that never actually worked.

              And, how can I forward the visiting IPs? I only see the firewall's IP in the logs which is not useful.
              I found this but it doesn't send the visiting IP;
              a1f97c18-6897-4202-9161-8026cb873c6c-image.png

              kiokomanK 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • kiokomanK
                kiokoman LAYER 8 @lewis
                last edited by kiokoman

                @lewis
                if you can, don't use cert on web server just point to port 80
                people will connect to haproxy and use the cert from ACME/haproxy but haproxy will speak to the web server with the self signed cert

                on the backend add all the server that will do balance under "server list", set a Weight (10 / 20 /30 etc etc) and select round robin under load balancing

                backend but carefully read the warning

                567cc5b8-af5b-4e43-a2e2-4db5f33801bf-image.png

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                • L
                  lewis
                  last edited by

                  I can't point to port 80 because all of the sites are built using https only.
                  Any sites I'd like to add would be https.

                  kiokomanK 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • kiokomanK
                    kiokoman LAYER 8 @lewis
                    last edited by

                    @lewis
                    not a big problem, it's just for convenience, create a self signed cert with all the domains you have

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                    L 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • L
                      lewis @kiokoman
                      last edited by

                      @kiokoman said in SSL certs handling and HAproxy:

                      @lewis
                      not a big problem, it's just for convenience, create a self signed cert with all the domains you have

                      What does that mean, 'with all of the domains'?
                      Do you mean you have to generate a self signed cert for each domain or there's a way to do one that has all of the names?

                      And more importantly, will https use the always updates SSL options that LE offers or will visitors end up using what ever the Apache server is configured with?

                      kiokomanK 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • kiokomanK
                        kiokoman LAYER 8 @lewis
                        last edited by kiokoman

                        @lewis
                        visitors will use and see only the ACME cert

                        with openssl you can create 1 cert with all domains name

                        make a copy and edit openssl.cfg

                        Under the [ CA_default ] section, change the line (uncomment the line) # copy_extensions = copy to copy_extensions = copy

                        Under the [ v3_ca ] section,

                        change the line # subjectAltName=email:copy to subjectAltName=@alt_names

                        add a new line with extendedKeyUsage = serverAuth

                        Go to the end of the file and add
                        [ alt_names ]

                        if the server has multiple address expected to be used for connection, you should add multiple entries under [ alt_names ]. For example,

                        [ alt_names ]

                        DNS.1 = app.example.com

                        DNS.2 = app2.example.com

                        DNS.3 = app3.example.com

                        IP.1 = 192.168.1.1

                        IP.2 = 10.10.10.10

                        under cmd if you use windows:

                        set OPENSSL_CONF=C:\OpenSSL-Win64\bin\openssl.cfg (change the directory to where you have your modified copy of openssl.cfg)
                        openssl genrsa -out ServerKey.key 2048
                        openssl req -x509 -new -key ServerKey.key -sha256 -days 825 -out myCA.cer
                        

                        if you need pkcs12

                        openssl pkcs12 -export -out keystore.p12 -inkey ServerKey.key -in myCA.cer
                        

                        These are notes I have and they should still work... probably ...

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                        L 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                        • L
                          lewis
                          last edited by lewis

                          Getting the visitor IP is simple enough.
                          In httpd.conf, I changed;

                          LogFormat "%v %h %l %u %t "%r" %>s %b %D %^FB "%{Referer}i" "%{User-Agent}i"" combined
                          to
                          LogFormat "%v %a %l %u %t "%r" %>s %b %D %^FB "%{Referer}i" "%{User-Agent}i"" combined
                          (%h to %a)

                          And added this directive;
                          RemoteIPHeader X-Forwarded-For

                          In haproxy, Frontend, Advanced, I enabled;
                          6d37c7a4-b559-48e7-8736-80c7cb756995-image.png

                          Now I see the actual visitor IP.

                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                          • L
                            lewis @kiokoman
                            last edited by

                            @kiokoman said in SSL certs handling and HAproxy:

                            visitors will use and see only the ACME cert

                            Not sure I understand this. One cert can handle one or more virtual hosts on one web server?

                            The web servers do not have more than one IP, just one but some have lots of virtualhosts, so, different domain names.
                            And of course, since I have to use port 80/443 for many of those domains, I have a bunch of VIPs on pfsense.

                            if you need pkcs12

                            Don't even know what that is unless I look it up so probably not :).

                            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                            • kiokomanK
                              kiokoman LAYER 8
                              last edited by kiokoman

                              yes, both ACME and your self signed cert can handle more virtual hosts/domain names with only 1 cert, it's one of the reason why people use haproxy on the first place, 1 ip > many domains

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                              Please do not use chat/PM to ask for help
                              we must focus on silencing this @guest character. we must make up lies and alter the copyrights !
                              Don't forget to Upvote with the 👍 button for any post you find to be helpful.

                              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                              • L
                                lewis
                                last edited by

                                In the case that we've been working on, it's one domain on one web server.
                                There is another that should be redirected (301) to the main domain in the httpd.conf but I commented that out while working on this.
                                So maybe that's a good test to try and understand what this new thing (to me) is about.

                                I definitely don't understand how I can use just one LE cert on pfsense/acme to do this but I kind of understand doing it on the web servers.
                                On the web servers, I could also just create a self singed cert for every domain that's very long lasting. That I understand.

                                Getting into editing openssl and other things like that, I don't and could easily lose track of stuff like that. I'm looking for the easiest way that is a no brainer to maintain as I jump from one location to another so have a hard time keeping track of highly nuanced configs.

                                When you say using one certificate, and let's say we're talking about LE, I've created certs where you use '-d domain1.com -d domain2.com' etc. So I understand that any number of domains can be inserted into one cert. Is this what you mean? I assume so.

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                                • stephenw10S
                                  stephenw10 Netgate Administrator
                                  last edited by

                                  Yes the LE cert used by the HAProxy front end has to be valid for all hosts/domains it is accepting traffic for.

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                                  • L
                                    lewis
                                    last edited by

                                    Since I have the single server working, now, moving on to the load balanced servers.

                                    Those web servers are using a san share to get their certificates.
                                    They don't have any self signed cert of course so what would the first step be?

                                    Since they were not going through the haproxy, should I address that first or just do it all at once?

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                                    • L
                                      lewis
                                      last edited by

                                      My original plan was to have pfsense handle the cert encryption so that it could send all of the traffic to a varnish server on the LAN.
                                      I guess that means that no matter what, I would have to remove all ssl from each site/server so that pfsense could handle it then send traffic to varnish using port 80.

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                                      • stephenw10S
                                        stephenw10 Netgate Administrator
                                        last edited by

                                        No you can still use https between HAProxy and the backend servers if you have to. HAproxy sees all the traffic because the connection from clients are terminated there.

                                        It's just more common to use http to the backends because that traffic doesn't need to be encrypted so it's unnecessary loading on the servers.

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                                        • L
                                          lewis
                                          last edited by lewis

                                          Well, as you know, I've been able to get the one web server working but I've not touched the others for load balancing yet.
                                          I quickly tried forwarding the traffic using rules instead of nat the other day but that didn't work. Those web servers already have their own ssl certs and I'd like to tackle that later.

                                          I've been playing with trying to get varnish in the mix and wasting a huge number of hours on this.
                                          Again, nothing I find actually works so learning is difficult since there is nothing working to see yet only confusion.

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                                          • stephenw10S
                                            stephenw10 Netgate Administrator
                                            last edited by

                                            Hmm, if you're using Varnish I'm not really sure why you would use HAProxy to be honest. Just forward all the traffic to the Varnish proxy and let it handle everything.
                                            Though I haven't used Varnish myself.

                                            L 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
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