Commit graph

4 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Emily
21f183a3fe nixos/tests/common/acme: don't set nameservers for client
The resolver is mainly useful for the ACME server, and acme.nix uses its
own DNS server to test DNS-01 challenges.
2020-04-18 05:15:47 +01:00
Emily
e6d5e83cf1 nixos/tests/common/acme: enable Pebble strict mode
This lets us get early warning about any bugs or backwards-compatibility
hazards in lego.

Pebble will default to this in the future, but doesn't currently;
see https://github.com/letsencrypt/pebble/blob/v2.3.0/README.md#strict-mode.
2020-04-18 05:15:47 +01:00
Emily
695fd78ac4 nixos/tests/acme: use CAP_NET_BIND_SERVICE 2020-04-18 05:15:47 +01:00
Emily
d0f04c1623 nixos/tests/acme: use *.test domains
Shimming out the Let's Encrypt domain name to reuse client configuration
doesn't work properly (Pebble uses different endpoint URL formats), is
recommended against by upstream,[1] and is unnecessary now that the ACME
module supports specifying an ACME server. This commit changes the tests
to use the domain name acme.test instead, and renames the letsencrypt
node to acme to reflect that it has nothing to do with the ACME server
that Let's Encrypt runs. The imports are renamed for clarity:

* nixos/tests/common/{letsencrypt => acme}/{common.nix => client}
* nixos/tests/common/{letsencrypt => acme}/{default.nix => server}

The test's other domain names are also adjusted to use *.test for
consistency (and to avoid misuse of non-reserved domain names such
as standalone.com).

[1] https://github.com/letsencrypt/pebble/issues/283#issuecomment-545123242

Co-authored-by: Yegor Timoshenko <yegortimoshenko@riseup.net>
2020-04-18 05:15:47 +01:00