Configuring HTTPS servers | english русский 简体中文 עברית 日本語 türkçe news about download security advisories documentation pgp keys faq links books support donation trac wiki nginx.com | |
To configure an HTTPS server, the server { listen 443 ssl; server_name www.example.com; ssl_certificate www.example.com.crt; ssl_certificate_key www.example.com.key; ssl_protocols SSLv3 TLSv1 TLSv1.1 TLSv1.2; ssl_ciphers HIGH:!aNULL:!MD5; ... } The server certificate is a public entity. It is sent to every client that connects to the server. The private key is a secure entity and should be stored in a file with restricted access, however, it must be readable by nginx’s master process. The private key may alternately be stored in the same file as the certificate: ssl_certificate www.example.com.cert; ssl_certificate_key www.example.com.cert; in which case the file access rights should also be restricted. Although the certificate and the key are stored in one file, only the certificate is sent to a client.
The directives ssl_protocols and
ssl_ciphers
can be used to limit connections
to include only the strong versions and ciphers of SSL/TLS.
Since version 1.0.5, nginx uses
“ CBC-mode ciphers might be vulnerable to a number of attacks and to the BEAST attack in particular (see CVE-2011-3389). Configuration of ciphers can be adjusted to prefer RC4-SHA as the following: ssl_ciphers RC4:HIGH:!aNULL:!MD5; ssl_prefer_server_ciphers on;
HTTPS server optimizationSSL operations consume extra CPU resources. On multi-processor systems several worker processes should be run, no less than the number of available CPU cores. The most CPU-intensive operation is the SSL handshake. There are two ways to minimize the number of these operations per client: the first is by enabling keepalive connections to send several requests via one connection and the second is to reuse SSL session parameters to avoid SSL handshakes for parallel and subsequent connections. The sessions are stored in an SSL session cache shared between workers and configured by the ssl_session_cache directive. One megabyte of the cache contains about 4000 sessions. The default cache timeout is 5 minutes. It can be increased by using the ssl_session_timeout directive. Here is a sample configuration optimized for a quad core system with 10 megabyte shared session cache: worker_processes 4; http { ssl_session_cache shared:SSL:10m; ssl_session_timeout 10m; server { listen 443 ssl; server_name www.example.com; keepalive_timeout 70; ssl_certificate www.example.com.crt; ssl_certificate_key www.example.com.key; ssl_protocols SSLv3 TLSv1 TLSv1.1 TLSv1.2; ssl_ciphers HIGH:!aNULL:!MD5; ...
SSL certificate chainsSome browsers may complain about a certificate signed by a well-known certificate authority, while other browsers may accept the certificate without issues. This occurs because the issuing authority has signed the server certificate using an intermediate certificate that is not present in the certificate base of well-known trusted certificate authorities which is distributed with a particular browser. In this case the authority provides a bundle of chained certificates which should be concatenated to the signed server certificate. The server certificate must appear before the chained certificates in the combined file: $ cat www.example.com.crt bundle.crt > www.example.com.chained.crt The resulting file should be used in the ssl_certificate directive: server { listen 443 ssl; server_name www.example.com; ssl_certificate www.example.com.chained.crt; ssl_certificate_key www.example.com.key; ... } If the server certificate and the bundle have been concatenated in the wrong order, nginx will fail to start and will display the error message: SSL_CTX_use_PrivateKey_file(" ... /www.example.com.key") failed (SSL: error:0B080074:x509 certificate routines: X509_check_private_key:key values mismatch) because nginx has tried to use the private key with the bundle’s first certificate instead of the server certificate.
Browsers usually store intermediate certificates which they receive
and which are signed by trusted authorities, so actively used browsers
may already have the required intermediate certificates and
may not complain about a certificate sent without a chained bundle.
To ensure the server sends the complete certificate chain,
the $ openssl s_client -connect www.godaddy.com:443 ... Certificate chain 0 s:/C=US/ST=Arizona/L=Scottsdale/1.3.6.1.4.1.311.60.2.1.3=US /1.3.6.1.4.1.311.60.2.1.2=AZ/O=GoDaddy.com, Inc /OU=MIS Department/CN=www.GoDaddy.com /serialNumber=0796928-7/2.5.4.15=V1.0, Clause 5.(b) i:/C=US/ST=Arizona/L=Scottsdale/O=GoDaddy.com, Inc. /OU=http://certificates.godaddy.com/repository /CN=Go Daddy Secure Certification Authority /serialNumber=07969287 1 s:/C=US/ST=Arizona/L=Scottsdale/O=GoDaddy.com, Inc. /OU=http://certificates.godaddy.com/repository /CN=Go Daddy Secure Certification Authority /serialNumber=07969287 i:/C=US/O=The Go Daddy Group, Inc. /OU=Go Daddy Class 2 Certification Authority 2 s:/C=US/O=The Go Daddy Group, Inc. /OU=Go Daddy Class 2 Certification Authority i:/L=ValiCert Validation Network/O=ValiCert, Inc. /OU=ValiCert Class 2 Policy Validation Authority /CN=http://www.valicert.com//emailAddress=info@valicert.com ...
In this example the subject (“s”) of the
If a certificate bundle has not been added, only the server certificate #0 will be shown. A single HTTP/HTTPS serverIt is possible to configure a single server that handles both HTTP and HTTPS requests: server { listen 80; listen 443 ssl; server_name www.example.com; ssl_certificate www.example.com.crt; ssl_certificate_key www.example.com.key; ... }
Prior to 0.7.14 SSL could not be enabled selectively for
individual listening sockets, as shown above.
SSL could only be enabled for the entire server using the
ssl directive,
making it impossible to set up a single HTTP/HTTPS server.
The
Name-based HTTPS serversA common issue arises when configuring two or more HTTPS servers listening on a single IP address: server { listen 443 ssl; server_name www.example.com; ssl_certificate www.example.com.crt; ... } server { listen 443 ssl; server_name www.example.org; ssl_certificate www.example.org.crt; ... }
With this configuration a browser receives the default server’s certificate,
i.e. The oldest and most robust method to resolve the issue is to assign a separate IP address for every HTTPS server: server { listen 192.168.1.1:443 ssl; server_name www.example.com; ssl_certificate www.example.com.crt; ... } server { listen 192.168.1.2:443 ssl; server_name www.example.org; ssl_certificate www.example.org.crt; ... }
An SSL certificate with several names
There are other ways that allow to share a single IP address
between several HTTPS servers.
However, all of them have their drawbacks.
One way is to use a certificate with several names in
the SubjectAltName certificate field, for example,
Another way is to use a certificate with a wildcard name, for example,
It is better to place a certificate file with several names and its private key file at the http level of configuration to inherit their single memory copy in all servers: ssl_certificate common.crt; ssl_certificate_key common.key; server { listen 443 ssl; server_name www.example.com; ... } server { listen 443 ssl; server_name www.example.org; ... }
Server Name IndicationA more generic solution for running several HTTPS servers on a single IP address is TLS Server Name Indication extension (SNI, RFC 6066), which allows a browser to pass a requested server name during the SSL handshake and, therefore, the server will know which certificate it should use for the connection. However, SNI has limited browser support. Currently it is supported starting with the following browsers versions:
Only domain names can be passed in SNI, however some browsers may erroneously pass an IP address of the server as its name if a request includes literal IP address. One should not rely on this.
In order to use SNI in nginx, it must be supported in both the
OpenSSL library with which the nginx binary has been built as well as
the library to which it is being dynamically linked at run time.
OpenSSL supports SNI since 0.9.8f version if it was built with config option
$ nginx -V ... TLS SNI support enabled ... However, if the SNI-enabled nginx is linked dynamically to an OpenSSL library without SNI support, nginx displays the warning: nginx was built with SNI support, however, now it is linked dynamically to an OpenSSL library which has no tlsext support, therefore SNI is not available
Compatibility
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