Update ACME.md to mention ACME v1 deprecation

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Brendan Abolivier 2020-02-12 20:14:16 +00:00
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# ACME # ACME
Synapse v1.0 will require valid TLS certificates for communication between From version 1.0 (June 2019) onwards, Synapse requires valid TLS
servers (port `8448` by default) in addition to those that are client-facing certificates for communication between servers (by default on port
(port `443`). If you do not already have a valid certificate for your domain, `8448`) in addition to those that are client-facing (port `443`). To
the easiest way to get one is with Synapse's new ACME support, which will use help homeserver admins fulfil this new requirement, Synapse v0.99.0
the ACME protocol to provision a certificate automatically. Synapse v0.99.0+ introduced support for automatically provisioning certificates through
will provision server-to-server certificates automatically for you for free [Let's Encrypt](https://letsencrypt.org/) using the ACME protocol.
through [Let's Encrypt](https://letsencrypt.org/) if you tell it to.
## Deprecation of ACME v1
In [March 2019](https://community.letsencrypt.org/t/end-of-life-plan-for-acmev1/88430),
Let's Encrypt announced that they were deprecating version 1 of the ACME
protocol, with the plan to disable the use of it for new accounts in
November 2019, and for existing accounts in June 2020.
Synapse doesn't currently support version 2 of the ACME protocol, which
means that:
* for existing installs, Synapse's built-in ACME support will continue
to work until June 2020.
* for new installs, this feature will not work at all.
Either way, it is recommended to move from Synapse's ACME support
feature to an external automated tool such as [certbot](https://github.com/certbot/certbot)
(or browse [this list](https://letsencrypt.org/fr/docs/client-options/)
for an alternative ACME client).
It's also recommended to use a reverse proxy for the server-facing
communications (mode documentation about this can be found
[here](/docs/reverse_proxy.md)) as well as the client-facing ones and
have it serve the certificates.
In case you can't do that and need Synapse to serve them itself, make
sure to set the `tls_certificate_path` configuration setting to the path
of the certificate (make sure to use the certificate containing the full
certification chain, e.g. `fullchain.pem` if using certbot) and
`tls_private_key_path` to the path of the matching private key.
If you still want to use Synapse's built-in ACME support, the rest of
this document explains how to set it up.
## Initial setup
In the case that your `server_name` config variable is the same as In the case that your `server_name` config variable is the same as
the hostname that the client connects to, then the same certificate can be the hostname that the client connects to, then the same certificate can be