i am not the author of this article, but it's important that web not only develop develop and develop, but we must thinking about security.
Original Author : Bob Silverberg
Original Articel : Enable SSL
How to
Step 1 - What You Need
- A copy of Apache that includes SSL support.
- A copy of OpenSSL.
- An openssl.cnf file.
The copy of Apache that I had installed on my machine did not include SSL support, so I moseyed on down to the Apache download page. You'll notice on that page that there are files named something like apache_2.2.11-win32-x86-openssl-0.9.8i.msi, as well as files named something likeapache_2.2.11-win32-x86-no_ssl.msi. You need to have the openssl version installed, not the no_sslversion (duh). I couldn't find any reliable info on manually adding SSL support to a no_ssl install, so I simply downloaded the most up-to-date version of the openssl installer and ran it. It successfully upgraded my version of Apache without overwriting any of my existing config files.
The nice thing about that installer is that it includes a copy of OpenSSL, so you don't need to download that separately.
Finally, you need an openssl.cnf file, which doesn't come with the package. I downloaded one that works from Neil's site. If that link is broken you can find a copy attached to this blog post. I have Apache installed in C:\Apache\, which means that I can find OpenSSL in C:\Apache\bin\, so I copied the openssl.cnf file into that directory.
Step 2 - Create a Self-Signed Certificate
This step will create a number of files related to your certificate. Each of those files has the same name, with a different extension. In the example commands below I've used the name bob. Feel free to replace that with anything you like.
Open a command prompt and switch to the directory that contains OpenSSL (C:\Apache\bin\, in my case). To create a new certificate request type the following:
You'll be prompted to answer a bunch of questions, the answers to which can all be left blank except for:
- PEM pass phrase: This is the password associated with the private key (bob.pem) that you're generating. This will only be used in the next step, so make it anything you like, but don't forget it.
- Common Name: This should be the fully-qualified domain name associated with this certificate. I was creating a certificate for a site on my local machine which I browsed to via http://savacms/, so I just entered savacms. If I was creating a cert for my blog I would have entered www.silverwareconsulting.com.
When the command completes you should have a two files called bob.csr and bob.pem in your folder.
Now we need to create a non-password protected key for Apache to use:
You'll be prompted for the password that you created above, after which a file called bob.key should appear in your folder.
Finally, we need to create an X.509 certificate, which Apache also requires:
And that's it - you now have a self-signed certificate that Apache can use to enable SSL. I chose to move the required files from C:\Apache\bin\ to C:\Apache\conf\ssl\, but you can put them anywhere as you'll be pointing to them in your Apache config files.
Step 3 - Enable SSL on Apache
Open your httpd.conf file (which for me is in C:\Apache\conf\) and uncomment (remove the # sign) the following lines:
- #LoadModule ssl_module modules/mod_ssl.so
- #Include conf/extra/httpd-ssl.conf
Open your httpd-ssl.conf file (which for me is in C:\Apache\conf\extra\) and update the section entitled <VirtualHost _default_:443>. You'll need to update the values of ServerAdmin,DocumentRoot, ServerName, ErrorLog and CustomLog to match your environment. You'll also need to point SSLCertificateFile to your .cert file and SSLCertificateKeyFile to your .key file.
Restart Apache and browse to https://localhost/. You're now accessing your Apache server over SSL!
Step 4 - Create a VirtualHost Entry for Your Site
If you're like me, you're running Apache because you want to run multiple sites on your local machine. In that case you undoubtedly have multiple <VirtualHost> entries in your httpd-vhosts.conf file. In order to access a particular site via SSL, you need to add an additional <VirtualHost> entry for it. To illustrate I'll show you an existing <VirtualHost> entry that I have, and then the new <VirtualHost> that I created to allow me to access that site via SSL. Here's the original entry:
1<VirtualHost *:80>
2ServerAdmin bob.silverberg@gmail.com
3DocumentRoot C:/wwwroot/savaCMS
4ServerName savaCMS
5DirectoryIndex index.html, index.cfm
6ErrorLog logs/savaCMS-error_log
7CustomLog logs/savaCMS-access_log common
8<Directory C:/wwwroot/savaCMS>
9Options All
10AllowOverride All
11</Directory>
12</VirtualHost>
And here's the additional entry that I added:
1<VirtualHost *:443>
2SSLEngine on
3SSLCipherSuite ALL:!ADH:!EXPORT56:RC4+RSA:+HIGH:+MEDIUM:+LOW:+SSLv2:+EXP:+eNULL
4SSLCertificateFile "C:/Apache/conf/ssl/savacms.cert"
5SSLCertificateKeyFile "C:/Apache/conf/ssl/savacms.key"
6ServerAdmin bob.silverberg@gmail.com
7DocumentRoot C:/wwwroot/savaCMS
8ServerName savaCMS
9DirectoryIndex index.html, index.cfm
10ErrorLog logs/savaCMS-error_log
11CustomLog logs/savaCMS-access_log common
12<Directory C:/wwwroot/savaCMS>
13Options All
14AllowOverride All
15</Directory>
16</VirtualHost>
I can now browse to http://savaCMS/ as well as https://savaCMS/! Hopefully these instructions will be found by the next person who chooses to attempt this.
my comment : Holy shittttt great article saving my hours, thanks bob :D
if you need another reference here's the link
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