ZeroSSL REST API wrapper based on the ZeroSSL REST API documentation.
This library provides a wrapper for the ZeroSSL REST API.
It has been recently developed and as such, may still require some refinement. Please feel free to feedback by opening an issue. Community contributions are appreciated.
Note: while this is written in TypeScript, it is transpiled to JavaScript and will work perfectly fine in a regular JavaScript project. Just ignore the TypeScript specific annotations in the examples below.
Creating an intance of ZeroSSL is easy. Make sure to keep your API key secret.
import { ZeroSSL } from 'zerossl'
const accessKey = process.env.ZEROSSL_ACCESS_KEY || ''
const zerossl = new ZeroSSL({ accessKey })
import { ZeroSSL } from 'zerossl'
const accessKey = process.env.ZEROSSL_ACCESS_KEY || ''
const zerossl = new ZeroSSL({ accessKey })
const certificates = await zerossl.listCertificates()
certificates.results.forEach(certificate => {
console.log(certificate.id, certificate.status, certificate.common_name)
})
import { ZeroSSL } from 'zerossl'
const accessKey = process.env.ZEROSSL_ACCESS_KEY || ''
const zerossl = new ZeroSSL({ accessKey })
const certificate = await zerossl.getCertificates('<CERTIFICATE_ID>')
console.log(certificate)
import { ZeroSSL } from 'zerossl'
const accessKey = process.env.ZEROSSL_ACCESS_KEY || ''
const zerossl = new ZeroSSL({ accessKey })
// Generate a keypair
const keyPair = zerossl.generateKeyPair()
// Generate a CSR
const csrOptions = {
country: 'GB',
state: 'England',
locality: 'London',
organization: '',
organizationUnit: '',
email: '<YOUR_EMAIL>',
commonName: '<YOUR_DOMAIN_NAME>'
}
const csr = zerossl.generateCSR(keyPair, csrOptions)
// Create a certificate
const certificate = await zerossl.createCertificate({
csr: csr,
domains: ['<YOUR_DOMAIN_NAME>'],
validityDays: 90,
strictDomains: true
})
// Check it has been created
const checkResult = await zerossl.getCertificates(certificate.id)
console.log(checkResult)
// At this point, you should verify the domain
const verifyResult = await zerossl.verifyDomains(certificate.id, { validation_method: 'HTTP_CSR_HASH' })
console.log(verifyResult)
// Wait for ZeroSSL to issue certificate (anywhere up to 10 mins apparently)
For more examples, see the integration tests.
For an example of a basic HTTP verification server, see adamkdean/zerossl-verify.
The available methods mostly match those of the API, though there are a few additional methods.
public async createCertificate(options: CreateCertificateOptions): Promise<CertificateRecord>
public async verifyDomains(id: string, options: VerifyDomainOptions): Promise<CertificateRecord>
public async downloadCertificate(id: string): Promise<Certificate>
public async getCertificate(id: string): Promise<CertificateRecord>
public async listCertificates(options?: ListCertificateOptions): Promise<CertificateList>
public async verificationStatus(id: string): Promise<VerificationStatus>
public async resendVerification(id: string): Promise<boolean>
public async cancelCertificate(id: string): Promise<boolean>
public async revokeCertificate(id: string): Promise<boolean>
public async validateCSR(csr: string): Promise<CertificateSigningRequestValidationResult>
public generateKeyPair(bits = 2048): KeyPair
public generateCSR(keypair: KeyPair, options: CertificateSigningRequestOptions): string
If an error occurs in your request, we will trigger a throw error detailing the error name, error code, error type and error status code through an object as you can see below:
{
"message": "An error has occurred",
"code": "000",
"type": "error_example",
"status" : 400
}
You can access all the types used by this library by importing them from zerossl/lib/types
, e.g.
import { CertificateRecord } from 'zerossl/lib/types'
To use a custom key pair, you must ensure the private key is an RSA key in PEM format, and that the public key is in PEM format too.
To generate an RSA key pair, and convert the public key to PEM:
ssh-keygen -m pem -t rsa -b 4096
ssh-keygen -f <PUBLIC_KEY_FILE> -e -m pem > <PUBLIC_KEY_FILE>
You then simply need to create a KeyPair object:
const keyPair = {
privateKey: '<PRIVATE_KEY_PEM>',
publicKey: '<PUBLIC_KEY_PEM>'
}
zerossl.generateCSR(keyPair, { ... })
While I have endeavoured to write tests for this library, I have not been able to comprehensively implement them. Most functionality has been tested but as the documentation provided by ZeroSSL is quite sparse, there may be edge cases that have not been accounted for.
Community contributions are welcome.
This library only has two top-level dependencies: node-forge
and superagent
.
This library is a community open source project. There is no connection with ZeroSSL or Stack Holdings GmbH. The term ZeroSSL/zerossl is recognised as ZeroSSL™, a trademark of Stack Holdings GmbH in the USA, EU & UK and this library is provided in good faith as a community open source project.
MIT License
Copyright (c) 2022 Adam K Dean adamkdean@googlemail.com
Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:
The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.
THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.