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le-store-mongo

v1.0.0

Published

distributed and/or local persistence for greenlock

Downloads

11

Readme

le-store-mongo

An implementation of le-store-SPEC for mongo for storing and retrieving TLS certificate private keys and related account metadata

The default for this module is to connect to a local mongo with no credentials and store values in a database named greenlock.

The collections are named accounts and certificates.

To override these, see the configuration section below.

Configuration

To override the defaults, provide the following settings

{
  url: 'mongo connection url (see below)',
  dbName: 'the database name to use (defaults to "greenlock"),
  mmongo: 'Mongo driver options - defaults below',
  certsCollName: 'The name of the collection to store certificates in, certificates by default',
  accountsCollName: "Name of accounts collection, accounts by default.'
}

Connection url takes the form {protocol}://{username}:{password}@{mongo_server_url}

The installed driver will support both mongodb:// and mongodb+srv:// connections (the latter is a dns based strategy for clustering/sharding). If you are overriding mongo options and n order for mongodb+srv to work, you need to pass {useNewUrlParser: true} into mongoOptions

If you want to embed the greenlock data in your own database, that's fine. It stores the certificates, emails and accounts in the following collections

  • certificates
  • accounts

API

* getOptions()
* accounts.
  * checkKeypair(opts, cb)
  * setKeypair(opts, keypair, cb)
  * check(opts, cb)
  * set(opts, reg, cb)
* certificates.
  * checkKeypair(opts, cb)
  * setKeypair(opts, keypair, cb)
  * check(opts, cb)
  * set(opts, certs, cb)

Keypairs

For convenience, the keypair object will always contain both PEM and JWK versions of the private and/or public keys when being passed to the *Keypair functions.

set

setKeypair will always be called with email and all three forms of the keypair: privateKeyPem, publicKeyPem, and privateKeyJwk. It's easy to generate publicKeyJwk from privateKeyJwk because it is just a copy of the public fields e and n.

// keypair looks like this
{ privateKeyPem: '...'
, publicKeyPem: '...'
, privateKeyJwk: { ... }
}

check

checkKeypair may be called with any of email, accountId, and keypair - which will contain only publicKeyPem and publicKeyJwk.

// opts looks like this
{
  email: '...@...'
, accountId: '...'
, keypair: {
    publicKeyPem: '...'
  , publicKeyJwk: { ... }
  }
}

Data housekeeping

This module does not clear out old certificates. You can either implement this yourself as a cron-job, or create managed collections which will self-housekeep on a FIFO basis.