I think it’s a good idea, everyone should be automating this anyway.

  • Ebby
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    1265 days ago

    Those emails have warned me something was pooched in advance many times. I do find them useful.

    Sad to see them go, but nice they mention an alternative.

    • @[email protected]
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      285 days ago

      Pretty much all monitoring solutions on the market track cert expiration nowadays. I get an alert when any of my certs have <5 days left

      • @[email protected]
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        55 days ago

        What monitoring solution do you use? I need to set something up for my own projects but haven’t gotten around to it. Any experience with Nagios?

        • @[email protected]
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          55 days ago

          I set up uptime kuma to also monitor certs this week when I got the reminder email about them stopping the email warnings, been using it for some time for uptime monitoring (mostly to see if some auto docker image update screws up my services) and the notification parts has worked nicely for that, so I’m also assuming it will work nicely for the certificates

        • @[email protected]
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          14 days ago

          If you have the time to spare (a few weeks perhaps, if coming from zero) to experiment and read, Prometheus and Grafana offers a lot and can be really flexible. I use a pretty simple bash script that scrapes my desired https endpoints and writes out the results to a file Prometheus (node-exporter) understands, and from there I can write alert rules in Grafana to fire off notices by email or slack.

        • @[email protected]
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          25 days ago

          I use NewRelic myself. They are software agnostic and only connect to your URL to get the expiration date.

          If you set up LE correctly, it should never get an alert. I haven’t been alerted since I set it up, to the point that I wonder if I set up the monitor correctly.

          The only thing I wish it could do is use custom ports. I have some services running on non standard ports.

    • @[email protected]
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      125 days ago

      I’ve mainly gotten false positives, myself. When I’ve added another subdomain or something and the certificate gets set up differently, so then you get 2-3 emails saying domain X will expire, but if you connect to the url you see it has 80+ days left. Setting up your own monitoring solution is probably long overdue for myself, and it’s nice I’m getting forced to do it, in a way

  • @[email protected]
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    255 days ago

    Providing expiration notifications costs Let’s Encrypt tens of thousands of dollars per year

    Not doubting them, but I don’t understand how that’s possible.

    Storing the email addresses and expiration dates takes an irrelevant amount of storage space, even if they had billions of cutomers.

    Sending the emails should also not cost thousands, even if a significant amount of customers regularly let their certificates expire (which hopefull isn’t the case).

    So where are the tens of thousands of yearly costs coming from?

    • @[email protected]
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      335 days ago

      As with all things email, they probably really wanted to make sure that the mails were delivered and thus were using a commercial MTA to ensure that.

      I’d wager, even at 20 or 30 or 40k a year, that’s way less than it’d cost to host infra and have at least two if not three engineers available 24/7 to maintain critical infra.

      Looking at my mail, over the years I’ve gotten a couple hundred email from them around certificates and expirations (and other things), and if you assume there’s a couple million sites using these certs, I could easily see how you’d end up in a situation where this could scale in cost very very slowly, until it’s suddenly a major drain.

    • @[email protected]
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      185 days ago

      If they send 2 emails per subdomain per year, that could easily be 10s of millions which would make the cost per email measured in thousandths of a cent. And I could see the number of subdomains being larger by a factor of 10, maybe more.

      Another angle: someone with IT experience needs to manage the system that seems emails, and other engineers need to integrate other systems with the email reminder system. The time spent on engineering could easily add up to thousands per year, if not tens of thousands.

      I’m guessing their figure is based on both running costs and engineering costs.

        • Scrubbles
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          25 days ago

          So sendgrid checking does 2.5M emails a month for $90/month, and if call them the Cadillac provider. More than that you have to contact sales, so I’m still wondering how it’s that expensive to them

    • @[email protected]
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      5 days ago

      Transactional email services are about $15 per 10,000 emails. I’ll round down to $10 to consider b2b deals and let’s just say it’s $10,000 per year. That would be like idk 84k emails a month.

      Keep in mind this doesn’t consider the DB hosting and the processing of expiring emails and salaries, so yeah, I could see it.

      Edit: before anyone yells at me. I can’t math.

      • @[email protected]
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        25 days ago

        Not yelling, but pointing out, to people who also dont math, that if we assume $10 per 10k emails (or $1 per 1k, for simpler math), that’d be $84 for 84000 emails in a month, so you need to add another 0 to the figure (ie 840k emails in a month)

    • @[email protected]
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      55 days ago

      I just realized I have no idea who pays for Let’s Encrypt. I just run the server commands, automate it, and move on.

  • Eskuero
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    195 days ago

    I did setup UptimeKuma for notifications on this. let’s see if it works out when the expiry arrives in a month

    • MaggiWuerze
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      45 days ago

      I think I’ll need to add notifications for my uptime kuma as well now. So far I’ve used it mostly for historical data but without the mails, I would like to get a notice

  • @[email protected]
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    5 days ago

    I manage all my certs using Cert Warden which has a dashboard that displays the expiry date. It does lack alerting, so I use Uptime-kuma to monitor the expiry dates of the certs. So not a big loss for me.

  • @[email protected]
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    34 days ago

    PSA: If you use Cloudflare to proxy, you can get a free decade long certificate and not worry about it for awhile.

    • hash
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      44 days ago

      Oh, look: the NSA dangling a carrot on a line.

      • @[email protected]
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        64 days ago

        Hey, if you wanna put your home server out there so the first person who gets pissy at you can DDoS you off the net until your ISP decides to cancel your service, that’s a perfectly acceptable decision to make for yourself.

  • @[email protected]
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    125 days ago

    I think it’s a good idea, everyone should be automating this anyway.

    This is still not possible in all scenarios. For example, wildcard certificates for DNS providers with no API support.

      • @[email protected]
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        45 days ago

        There are a lot of embedded systems that do not offer API support to swap out certificates. Things like switches, dvr, nas devices, etc.

        • @[email protected]
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          14 days ago

          How are those devices affected by having no notification anymore? The manual labor exists anyway.

          Most network switches and devices have a web gui to switch them out. Those can be automated.

  • Kokesh
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    95 days ago

    I just wish I wouldn’t have to renew certs so often.

    • @[email protected]
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      35 days ago

      I think thats the case for most of us. But for some like myself, it does mean I have to do the monitoring myself now. I can’t complain it was a free service. But it did warn me about a renewal problem before the cert expired, so it was a useful service for me.