I'm trying to get HTTPS working on express.js for node, and I can't figure it out.
This is my app.js
code.
var express = require('express');
var fs = require('fs');
var privateKey = fs.readFileSync('sslcert/server.key');
var certificate = fs.readFileSync('sslcert/server.crt');
var credentials = {key: privateKey, cert: certificate};
var app = express.createServer(credentials);
app.get('/', function(req,res) {
res.send('hello');
});
app.listen(8000);
When I run it, it seems to only respond to HTTP requests.
I wrote simple vanilla node.js
based HTTPS app:
var fs = require("fs"),
http = require("https");
var privateKey = fs.readFileSync('sslcert/server.key').toString();
var certificate = fs.readFileSync('sslcert/server.crt').toString();
var credentials = {key: privateKey, cert: certificate};
var server = http.createServer(credentials,function (req, res) {
res.writeHead(200, {'Content-Type': 'text/plain'});
res.end('Hello World\n');
});
server.listen(8000);
And when I run this app, it does respond to HTTPS requests. Note that I don't think the toString() on the fs result matters, as I've used combinations of both and still no es bueno.
EDIT TO ADD:
For production systems, you're probably better off using Nginx or HAProxy to proxy requests to your nodejs app. You can set up nginx to handle the ssl requests and just speak http to your node app.js.
EDIT TO ADD (4/6/2015)
For systems on using AWS, you are better off using EC2 Elastic Load Balancers to handle SSL Termination, and allow regular HTTP traffic to your EC2 web servers. For further security, setup your security group such that only the ELB is allowed to send HTTP traffic to the EC2 instances, which will prevent external unencrypted HTTP traffic from hitting your machines.
In express.js (since version 3) you should use that syntax:
var fs = require('fs');
var http = require('http');
var https = require('https');
var privateKey = fs.readFileSync('sslcert/server.key', 'utf8');
var certificate = fs.readFileSync('sslcert/server.crt', 'utf8');
var credentials = {key: privateKey, cert: certificate};
var express = require('express');
var app = express();
// your express configuration here
var httpServer = http.createServer(app);
var httpsServer = https.createServer(credentials, app);
httpServer.listen(8080);
httpsServer.listen(8443);
In that way you provide express middleware to the native http/https server
If you want your app running on ports below 1024, you will need to use sudo
command (not recommended) or use a reverse proxy (e.g. nginx, haproxy).
First, you need to create selfsigned.key and selfsigned.crt files. Go to Create a Self-Signed SSL Certificate Or do following steps.
Go to the terminal and run the following command.
sudo openssl req -x509 -nodes -days 365 -newkey rsa:2048 -keyout ./selfsigned.key -out selfsigned.crt
After that put the following information
Country Name (2 letter code) [AU]: US
State or Province Name (full name) [Some-State]: NY
Locality Name (eg, city) []:NY
Organization Name (eg, company) [Internet Widgits Pty Ltd]: xyz (Your - Organization)
Organizational Unit Name (eg, section) []: xyz (Your Unit Name)
Common Name (e.g. server FQDN or YOUR name) []: www.xyz.com (Your URL)
Email Address []: Your email
After creation adds key & cert file in your code, and pass the options to the server.
const express = require('express');
const https = require('https');
const fs = require('fs');
const port = 3000;
var key = fs.readFileSync(__dirname + '/../certs/selfsigned.key');
var cert = fs.readFileSync(__dirname + '/../certs/selfsigned.crt');
var options = {
key: key,
cert: cert
};
app = express()
app.get('/', (req, res) => {
res.send('Now using https..');
});
var server = https.createServer(options, app);
server.listen(port, () => {
console.log("server starting on port : " + port)
});
Finally run your application using https.
More information https://github.com/sagardere/set-up-SSL-in-nodejs
sudo chown ubuntu -R /etc/letsencrypt
and it's worked. ubuntu is user name you can replace it with user name.
'/../certs/selfsigned.key'
, I wonder how to get readFileSync working. See problem: stackoverflow.com/questions/56744208/…
I ran into a similar issue with getting SSL to work on a port other than port 443. In my case I had a bundle certificate as well as a certificate and a key. The bundle certificate is a file that holds multiple certificates, node requires that you break those certificates into separate elements of an array.
var express = require('express');
var https = require('https');
var fs = require('fs');
var options = {
ca: [fs.readFileSync(PATH_TO_BUNDLE_CERT_1), fs.readFileSync(PATH_TO_BUNDLE_CERT_2)],
cert: fs.readFileSync(PATH_TO_CERT),
key: fs.readFileSync(PATH_TO_KEY)
};
app = express()
app.get('/', function(req,res) {
res.send('hello');
});
var server = https.createServer(options, app);
server.listen(8001, function(){
console.log("server running at https://IP_ADDRESS:8001/")
});
In app.js you need to specify https and create the server accordingly. Also, make sure that the port you're trying to use is actually allowing inbound traffic.
PATH_TO_BUNDLE_CERT_1
, I wonder how to get readFileSync working. See problem: stackoverflow.com/questions/56744208/…
Including Points:
SSL setup In config/local.js In config/env/production.js
HTTP and WS handling
The app must run on HTTP in development so we can easily debug our app. The app must run on HTTPS in production for security concern. App production HTTP request should always redirect to https.
SSL configuration
In Sailsjs there are two ways to configure all the stuff, first is to configure in config folder with each one has their separate files (like database connection regarding settings lies within connections.js ). And second is configure on environment base file structure, each environment files presents in config/env
folder and each file contains settings for particular env.
Sails first looks in config/env folder and then look forward to config/ *.js
Now lets setup ssl in config/local.js
.
var local = {
port: process.env.PORT || 1337,
environment: process.env.NODE_ENV || 'development'
};
if (process.env.NODE_ENV == 'production') {
local.ssl = {
secureProtocol: 'SSLv23_method',
secureOptions: require('constants').SSL_OP_NO_SSLv3,
ca: require('fs').readFileSync(__dirname + '/path/to/ca.crt','ascii'),
key: require('fs').readFileSync(__dirname + '/path/to/jsbot.key','ascii'),
cert: require('fs').readFileSync(__dirname + '/path/to/jsbot.crt','ascii')
};
local.port = 443; // This port should be different than your default port
}
module.exports = local;
Alternative you can add this in config/env/production.js too. (This snippet also show how to handle multiple CARoot certi)
Or in production.js
module.exports = {
port: 443,
ssl: {
secureProtocol: 'SSLv23_method',
secureOptions: require('constants').SSL_OP_NO_SSLv3,
ca: [
require('fs').readFileSync(__dirname + '/path/to/AddTrustExternalCARoot.crt', 'ascii'),
require('fs').readFileSync(__dirname + '/path/to/COMODORSAAddTrustCA.crt', 'ascii'),
require('fs').readFileSync(__dirname + '/path/to/COMODORSADomainValidationSecureServerCA.crt', 'ascii')
],
key: require('fs').readFileSync(__dirname + '/path/to/jsbot.key', 'ascii'),
cert: require('fs').readFileSync(__dirname + '/path/to/jsbot.crt', 'ascii')
}
};
http/https & ws/wss redirection
Here ws is Web Socket and wss represent Secure Web Socket, as we set up ssl then now http and ws both requests become secure and transform to https and wss respectively.
There are many source from our app will receive request like any blog post, social media post but our server runs only on https so when any request come from http it gives “This site can’t be reached” error in client browser. And we loss our website traffic. So we must redirect http request to https, same rules allow for websocket otherwise socket will fails.
So we need to run same server on port 80 (http), and divert all request to port 443(https). Sails first compile config/bootstrap.js file before lifting server. Here we can start our express server on port 80.
In config/bootstrap.js (Create http server and redirect all request to https)
module.exports.bootstrap = function(cb) {
var express = require("express"),
app = express();
app.get('*', function(req, res) {
if (req.isSocket)
return res.redirect('wss://' + req.headers.host + req.url)
return res.redirect('https://' + req.headers.host + req.url)
}).listen(80);
cb();
};
Now you can visit http://www.yourdomain.com, it will redirect to https://www.yourdomain.com
This is how its working for me. The redirection used will redirect all the normal http as well.
const express = require('express');
const bodyParser = require('body-parser');
const path = require('path');
const http = require('http');
const app = express();
var request = require('request');
//For https
const https = require('https');
var fs = require('fs');
var options = {
key: fs.readFileSync('certificates/private.key'),
cert: fs.readFileSync('certificates/certificate.crt'),
ca: fs.readFileSync('certificates/ca_bundle.crt')
};
// API file for interacting with MongoDB
const api = require('./server/routes/api');
// Parsers
app.use(bodyParser.json());
app.use(bodyParser.urlencoded({ extended: false }));
// Angular DIST output folder
app.use(express.static(path.join(__dirname, 'dist')));
// API location
app.use('/api', api);
// Send all other requests to the Angular app
app.get('*', (req, res) => {
res.sendFile(path.join(__dirname, 'dist/index.html'));
});
app.use(function(req,resp,next){
if (req.headers['x-forwarded-proto'] == 'http') {
return resp.redirect(301, 'https://' + req.headers.host + '/');
} else {
return next();
}
});
http.createServer(app).listen(80)
https.createServer(options, app).listen(443);
const https = require('https').Server(app);
and tried this https.createServer(options,app);
That's when I kept getting createServer is not function error. Then, closely looking at examples like yours. I then I understood why I had issue. All I needed was this const https = require('https');
Thank you for your reply.
Use greenlock-express: Free SSL, Automated HTTPS
Greenlock handles certificate issuance and renewal (via Let's Encrypt) and http => https redirection, out-of-the box.
express-app.js
:
var express = require('express');
var app = express();
app.use('/', function (req, res) {
res.send({ msg: "Hello, Encrypted World!" })
});
// DO NOT DO app.listen()
// Instead export your app:
module.exports = app;
server.js
:
require('greenlock-express').create({
// Let's Encrypt v2 is ACME draft 11
version: 'draft-11'
, server: 'https://acme-v02.api.letsencrypt.org/directory'
// You MUST change these to valid email and domains
, email: 'john.doe@example.com'
, approveDomains: [ 'example.com', 'www.example.com' ]
, agreeTos: true
, configDir: "/path/to/project/acme/"
, app: require('./express-app.j')
, communityMember: true // Get notified of important updates
, telemetry: true // Contribute telemetry data to the project
}).listen(80, 443);
Screencast
Watch the QuickStart demonstration: https://youtu.be/e8vaR4CEZ5s
https://i.imgur.com/Y8ix6Ts.png
For Localhost
Just answering this ahead-of-time because it's a common follow-up question:
You can't have SSL certificates on localhost. However, you can use something like Telebit which will allow you to run local apps as real ones.
You can also use private domains with Greenlock via DNS-01 challenges, which is mentioned in the README along with various plugins which support it.
Non-standard Ports (i.e. no 80 / 443)
Read the note above about localhost - you can't use non-standard ports with Let's Encrypt either.
However, you can expose your internal non-standard ports as external standard ports via port-forward, sni-route, or use something like Telebit that does SNI-routing and port-forwarding / relaying for you.
You can also use DNS-01 challenges in which case you won't need to expose ports at all and you can also secure domains on private networks this way.
This answer is very similar to Setthase but its for LetsEncrypt (Ubuntu)
// Dependencies
const fs = require('fs');
const http = require('http');
const https = require('https');
const express = require('express');
const app = express();
// Certificate
const privateKey = fs.readFileSync('/etc/letsencrypt/live/yourdomain.com/privkey.pem', 'utf8');
const certificate = fs.readFileSync('/etc/letsencrypt/live/yourdomain.com/cert.pem', 'utf8');
const ca = fs.readFileSync('/etc/letsencrypt/live/yourdomain.com/chain.pem', 'utf8');
const credentials = {
key: privateKey,
cert: certificate,
ca: ca
};
app.use((req, res) => {
res.send('Hello there !');
});
// Starting both http & https servers
const httpServer = http.createServer(app);
const httpsServer = https.createServer(credentials, app);
httpServer.listen(80, () => {
console.log('HTTP Server running on port 80');
});
httpsServer.listen(443, () => {
console.log('HTTPS Server running on port 443');
});
You might encounter : EACCES: permission denied, open '/etc/letsencrypt/live/yourdeomain.com/privkey.pem'
The answer to that is here : Let's encrypt SSL couldn't start by "Error: EACCES: permission denied, open '/etc/letsencrypt/live/domain.net/privkey.pem'"
What worked for me is this in ubuntu ssh terminal Get user whoami
// Create group with root and nodeuser as members
$ sudo addgroup nodecert
$ sudo adduser ubuntu nodecert
$ sudo adduser root nodecert
// Make the relevant letsencrypt folders owned by said group.
$ sudo chgrp -R nodecert /etc/letsencrypt/live
$ sudo chgrp -R nodecert /etc/letsencrypt/archive
// Allow group to open relevant folders
$ sudo chmod -R 750 /etc/letsencrypt/live
$ sudo chmod -R 750 /etc/letsencrypt/archive
sudo reboot
Don't forget your PEM pass phrase in the credentials !
When you generate your credentials with OpenSSL (don't forget the -sha256
flag) :
OpenSSL> req -x509 -sha256 -newkey rsa:4096 -keyout key.pem -out cert.pem -days 365
Generating a RSA private key
writing new private key to 'key.pem'
Enter PEM pass phrase:
Verifying - Enter PEM pass phrase:
Your JS/TS code :
const credentials = {key: privateKey, cert: certificate, passphrase: 'YOUR passphrase'};
You can also generate a self-signed certificate using node-forge
In the code below, a new certificate is generated on startup, which means you will get a new certificate every time you restart the server.
const https = require('https')
const express = require('express')
const forge = require('node-forge')
;(function main() {
const server = https.createServer(
generateX509Certificate([
{ type: 6, value: 'http://localhost' },
{ type: 7, ip: '127.0.0.1' }
]),
makeExpressApp()
)
server.listen(8443, () => {
console.log('Listening on https://localhost:8443/')
})
})()
function generateX509Certificate(altNames) {
const issuer = [
{ name: 'commonName', value: 'example.com' },
{ name: 'organizationName', value: 'E Corp' },
{ name: 'organizationalUnitName', value: 'Washington Township Plant' }
]
const certificateExtensions = [
{ name: 'basicConstraints', cA: true },
{ name: 'keyUsage', keyCertSign: true, digitalSignature: true, nonRepudiation: true, keyEncipherment: true, dataEncipherment: true },
{ name: 'extKeyUsage', serverAuth: true, clientAuth: true, codeSigning: true, emailProtection: true, timeStamping: true },
{ name: 'nsCertType', client: true, server: true, email: true, objsign: true, sslCA: true, emailCA: true, objCA: true },
{ name: 'subjectAltName', altNames },
{ name: 'subjectKeyIdentifier' }
]
const keys = forge.pki.rsa.generateKeyPair(2048)
const cert = forge.pki.createCertificate()
cert.validity.notBefore = new Date()
cert.validity.notAfter = new Date()
cert.validity.notAfter.setFullYear(cert.validity.notBefore.getFullYear() + 1)
cert.publicKey = keys.publicKey
cert.setSubject(issuer)
cert.setIssuer(issuer)
cert.setExtensions(certificateExtensions)
cert.sign(keys.privateKey)
return {
key: forge.pki.privateKeyToPem(keys.privateKey),
cert: forge.pki.certificateToPem(cert)
}
}
function makeExpressApp() {
const app = express()
app.get('/', (req, res) => {
res.json({ message: 'Hello, friend' })
})
return app
}
This is my working code for express 4.0.
express 4.0 is very different from 3.0 and others.
4.0 you have /bin/www file, which you are going to add https here.
"npm start" is standard way you start express 4.0 server.
readFileSync() function should use __dirname get current directory
while require() use ./ refer to current directory.
First you put private.key and public.cert file under /bin folder, It is same folder as WWW file.
Success story sharing
localhost:80
but nothttps://localhost:443