Securing SFTPGo with a free Let's Encrypt TLS Certificate
This tutorial shows how to obtain and renew a free Let's encrypt TLS certificate for the SFTPGo Web UI and REST API, the WebDAV service and the FTP service.
Obtaining a Let's Encrypt certificate involves solving a domain validation challenge issued by an ACME (Automatic Certificate Management Environment) server. This challenge verifies your ownership of the domain(s) you're trying to obtain a certificate for. Different challenge types exist, the most commonly used being HTTP-01
. As its name suggests, it uses the HTTP protocol. While HTTP servers can be configured to use any TCP port, this challenge will only work on port 80
due to security measures.
More info about the supported challenge types can be found here.
There are several tools that allow you to obtain a Let's encrypt TLS certificate, in this tutorial we'll show how to use the lego CLI tool and the ACME protocol built into SFTPGo.
The lego
CLI supports all the Let's encrypt challenge types.
The ACME protocol built into SFTPGo supports HTTP-01
and TLS-ALPN-01
challenge types.
In this tutorial we'll focus on HTTP-01
challenge type and make the following assumptions:
- we are running SFTPGo on Linux
- we need a TLS certificate for the
sftpgo.com
domain - we have an existing web server already running on port
80
for thesftpgo.com
domain and the web root path is/var/www/sftpgo.com
Obtaining a certificate using the Lego CLI tool
Download the latest lego release and extract the lego binary in /usr/local/bin
, then verify that it works.
lego -v
lego version 4.4.0 linux/amd64
We'll store the certificates in /var/lib/lego
so create this directory.
sudo mkdir -p /var/lib/lego
Now obtain a certificate. The HTTP based challenge will be created in a file in /var/www/sftpgo.com/.well-known/acme-challenge
. This directory must be publicly served by your web server.
sudo lego --accept-tos --path="/var/lib/lego" --email="<you email address here>" --domains="sftpgo.com" --http.webroot="/var/www/sftpgo.com" --http run
You should be now able to list your certificate.
sudo lego --path="/var/lib/lego" list
Found the following certs:
Certificate Name: sftpgo.com
Domains: sftpgo.com
Expiry Date: 2021-09-09 19:41:51 +0000 UTC
Certificate Path: /var/lib/lego/certificates/sftpgo.com.crt
Now copy the certificate inside a private path to the SFTPGo service.
sudo mkdir -p /var/lib/sftpgo/certs
sudo cp /var/lib/lego/certificates/sftpgo.com.{crt,key} /var/lib/sftpgo/certs
sudo chown -R sftpgo:sftpgo /var/lib/sftpgo/certs
Automatic certificate renewal using the Lego CLI tool
SFTPGo can reload TLS certificates without service interruption, so we'll create a small bash script that copies the certificates inside the SFTPGo private directory and instructs SFTPGo to load them. We then configure lego
to run this script when the certificates are renewed.
Create the file /usr/local/bin/sftpgo_lego_hook
with the following contents.
#!/bin/bash
PATH=/usr/local/sbin:/usr/local/bin:/sbin:/bin:/usr/sbin:/usr/bin
CERTS_DIR=/var/lib/sftpgo/certs
mkdir -p ${CERTS_DIR}
cp ${LEGO_CERT_PATH} ${LEGO_CERT_KEY_PATH} ${CERTS_DIR}
chown -R sftpgo:sftpgo ${CERTS_DIR}
systemctl reload sftpgo
Ensure that this script is executable.
sudo chmod 755 /usr/local/bin/sftpgo_lego_hook
Now create a daily cron job to check the certificate expiration and renew it if necessary. For example create the file /etc/cron.daily/lego
with the following contents.
#!/bin/bash
lego --accept-tos --path="/var/lib/lego" --email="<you email address here>" --domains="sftpgo.com" --http-timeout 60 --http.webroot="/var/www/sftpgo.com" --http renew --renew-hook="/usr/local/bin/sftpgo_lego_hook"
Ensure that this cron script is executable.
sudo chmod 755 /etc/cron.daily/lego
When the certificate is renewed you should see SFTPGo logs like the following to confirm that the new certificate was successfully loaded.
{"level":"debug","time":"2021-06-14T20:05:15.785","sender":"service","message":"Received reload request"}
{"level":"debug","time":"2021-06-14T20:05:15.785","sender":"httpd","message":"TLS certificate \"/var/lib/sftpgo/certs/sftpgo.com.crt\" successfully loaded"}
{"level":"debug","time":"2021-06-14T20:05:15.785","sender":"ftpd","message":"TLS certificate \"/var/lib/sftpgo/certs/sftpgo.com.crt\" successfully loaded"}
{"level":"debug","time":"2021-06-14T20:05:15.786","sender":"webdavd","message":"TLS certificate \"/var/lib/sftpgo/certs/sftpgo.com.crt\" successfully loaded"}
Obtaining a certificate using the ACME protocol built into SFTPGo
Starting from SFTPGo v2.5.0 you can also request certificates from the Server Manager -> Configurations -> ACME section of the WebAdmin UI.
You can open the SFTPGo configuration file, search for the acme
section and change it as follow.
"acme": {
"domains": ["sftpgo.com"],
"email": "<you email address here>",
"key_type": "4096",
"certs_path": "/var/lib/sftpgo/certs",
"ca_endpoint": "https://acme-v02.api.letsencrypt.org/directory",
"renew_days": 30,
"http01_challenge": {
"port": 80,
"proxy_header": "",
"webroot": "/var/www/sftpgo.com"
},
"tls_alpn01_challenge": {
"port": 0
}
}
Alternatively (recommended), you can use environment variables by creating the file /etc/sftpgo/env.d/acme.env
with the following content.
SFTPGO_ACME__DOMAINS="sftpgo.com"
SFTPGO_ACME__EMAIL="<you email address here>"
SFTPGO_ACME__HTTP01_CHALLENGE__WEBROOT="/var/www/sftpgo.com"
Make sure that the sftpgo
user can write to the /var/www/sftpgo.com
directory or pre-create the /var/www/sftpgo.com/.well-known/acme-challenge
directory with the appropriate permissions.
This directory must be publicly served by your web server.
in this example we assume you have an existing HTTP server. If not, you can leave the web root blank and SFTPGo will resolve the HTTP01 challenge by itself.
Register your account and obtain certificates by running the following command.
sudo -E su - sftpgo -m -s /bin/bash -c 'sftpgo acme run -c /etc/sftpgo'
If this command completes successfully, you are done. The SFTPGo service will take care of the automatic renewal of certificates for the configured domains. Make sure that the sftpgo
system user can read and write to /var/lib/sftpgo/certs
directory otherwise the certificate renewal will fail.
Enable HTTPS for SFTPGo Web UI and REST API
You can open the SFTPGo configuration file, search for the httpd
section and change it as follow.
"httpd": {
"bindings": [
{
"port": 9443,
"address": "",
"enable_web_admin": true,
"enable_web_client": true,
"enable_rest_api": true,
"enable_https": true,
"certificate_file": "/var/lib/sftpgo/certs/sftpgo.com.crt",
"certificate_key_file": "/var/lib/sftpgo/certs/sftpgo.com.key",
.....
Alternatively (recommended), you can use environment variables by creating the file /etc/sftpgo/env.d/httpd.env
with the following content.
SFTPGO_HTTPD__BINDINGS__0__PORT=9443
SFTPGO_HTTPD__BINDINGS__0__ENABLE_HTTPS=1
SFTPGO_HTTPD__BINDINGS__0__CERTIFICATE_FILE="/var/lib/sftpgo/certs/sftpgo.com.crt"
SFTPGO_HTTPD__BINDINGS__0__CERTIFICATE_KEY_FILE="/var/lib/sftpgo/certs/sftpgo.com.key"
Restart SFTPGo to apply the changes. The HTTPS service is now available on port 9443
.
Enable HTTPS for WebDAV service
You can open the SFTPGo configuration file, search for the webdavd
section and change it as follow.
"webdavd": {
"bindings": [
{
"port": 10443,
"address": "",
"enable_https": true,
"certificate_file": "/var/lib/sftpgo/certs/sftpgo.com.crt",
"certificate_key_file": "/var/lib/sftpgo/certs/sftpgo.com.key",
...
Alternatively (recommended), you can use environment variables by creating the file /etc/sftpgo/env.d/webdavd.env
with the following content.
SFTPGO_WEBDAVD__BINDINGS__0__PORT=10443
SFTPGO_WEBDAVD__BINDINGS__0__ENABLE_HTTPS=1
SFTPGO_WEBDAVD__CERTIFICATE_FILE="/var/lib/sftpgo/certs/sftpgo.com.crt"
SFTPGO_WEBDAVD__CERTIFICATE_KEY_FILE="/var/lib/sftpgo/certs/sftpgo.com.key"
Restart SFTPGo to apply the changes. WebDAV is now availble over HTTPS on port 10443
.
Enable explicit FTP over TLS
You can open the SFTPGo configuration file, search for the ftpd
section and change it as follow.
"ftpd": {
"bindings": [
{
"port": 2121,
"address": "",
"apply_proxy_config": true,
"tls_mode": 1,
"certificate_file": "/var/lib/sftpgo/certs/sftpgo.com.crt",
"certificate_key_file": "/var/lib/sftpgo/certs/sftpgo.com.key",
...
Alternatively (recommended), you can use environment variables by creating the file /etc/sftpgo/env.d/ftpd.env
with the following content.
SFTPGO_FTPD__BINDINGS__0__PORT=2121
SFTPGO_FTPD__BINDINGS__0__TLS_MODE=1
SFTPGO_FTPD__BINDINGS__0__CERTIFICATE_FILE="/var/lib/sftpgo/certs/sftpgo.com.crt"
SFTPGO_FTPD__BINDINGS__0__CERTIFICATE_KEY_FILE="/var/lib/sftpgo/certs/sftpgo.com.key"
Restart SFTPGo to apply the changes. FTPES service is now available on port 2121
and TLS is required for both control and data connection (tls_mode
is 1).