Hi, On Thu, Dec 1, 2022 at 11:57 AM Info <[email protected]> wrote: > > Hi, > > a short update, I got everything up and running as you have stated with > the default Jetty classes in combination with SPI FLY, the startup level > of the bundles did the trick. > I only had to override the OpenJDK8ServerALPNProcessor because the > implemented Jetty class in my used version does not handle the JDK > internal ALPN classes correctly.
What does this mean exactly? OpenJDK8ServerALPNProcessor works fine in OSGi, so you should not need to override anything. > Also the correct Jetty XML configuration had me chasing my tail. > I now have the h2 and the acme-tls/1 protocols configured for ALPN and I > have registered an ACMEServerConnectionFactory with connection like you > suggested: I have never suggested to register an ACMEServerConnectionFactory. I repeatedly said that you don't need it. > My understanding of the ACME TLS-ALPN-01 using ACME4J is as follows: > > A cron job creates a ACME4j session object. A session is used to track > the communication with the ACME server (without creating a new account). > ACME4J uses an internal HttpURLConnection for communication with a CA > provider like Lets Encrypt. > Login to your provider account with the location URL and the KeyPair > using the ACME4J session object to get your account. > Then I can create an order for a new certificate which then contains a > Authorization that has to be processed if in PENDING state. > This Authorization then contains the challenges from which i will select > the TlsAlpn01Challenge . > I create a self signed certificate using the byte array from the > challenge and configure Jetty 443 port with this (question: how to do that). You can start a shell script that uses Java's keytool, or use the Java BouncyCastle APIs like we do in KeystoreGenerator. > Then trigger the challenge and let Jetty respond to multiple TLS > requests with the ALPN extension acme-tls/1 until the Authorization > status is VALID. > Question, what response? I guess the generated key pair is the answer > the CA is waiting for not needing to complete the handshake? Or does it > need to complete the handshake? The ACME server opens a connection to the TLS server (Jetty), Jetty completes the TLS handshake, then closes the connection. That is the "response": the bytes exchanged in the TLS handshake. -- Simone Bordet ---- http://cometd.org http://webtide.com Developer advice, training, services and support from the Jetty & CometD experts. _______________________________________________ jetty-users mailing list [email protected] To unsubscribe from this list, visit https://www.eclipse.org/mailman/listinfo/jetty-users
