I’m using a self signed CA for my home network with caddy. You just set it up to use a ca once and afterwards it just works. So yeah, really easy.
Iirc you can upload your own certificates and keys in npm, you’ll just have to manage the CA manually or with some other tool.
lemmyvore@feddit.nl 8 months ago
NPM also lets you use your own certificates. Pick the “Custom” option after you click “Add SSL certificate”.
If your services are not public-facing and you can’t use the HTTP challenge you have the alternative to use a real domain name and to ask the bot to verify access to your DNS service through an API token you revoke after that. In NPM it’s called “DNS challenge” in the certificate options.
So instead of using something like “service.local” as the domain you would use “service.local.realdomain.tld”, give the Let’s Encrypt bot a token to the DNS service that you use to manage realdomain.tld, and ask for a wildcard cert for *.local.realdomain.tld.
Of course you will also need *.local.realdomain.tld to resolve to your server’s private LAN IP. Typically people do this in their LAN DNS but if you can’t then you can do it in the public DNS too.