Document that PKCS8 PEM files should be used whenever possible

Closes gh-37170
pull/37492/head
Moritz Halbritter 1 year ago
parent 36629df416
commit ff2fc95daf

@ -195,6 +195,26 @@ The following example shows setting SSL properties using a Java KeyStore file:
key-password: "another-secret" key-password: "another-secret"
---- ----
Using configuration such as the preceding example means the application no longer supports a plain HTTP connector at port 8080.
Spring Boot does not support the configuration of both an HTTP connector and an HTTPS connector through `application.properties`.
If you want to have both, you need to configure one of them programmatically.
We recommend using `application.properties` to configure HTTPS, as the HTTP connector is the easier of the two to configure programmatically.
[[howto.webserver.configure-ssl.pem-files]]
==== Using PEM-encoded files
You can use PEM-encoded files instead of Java KeyStore files.
You should use PKCS#8 key files wherever possible.
PEM-encoded PKCS#8 key files start with a `-----BEGIN PRIVATE KEY-----` or `-----BEGIN ENCRYPTED PRIVATE KEY-----` header.
If you have files in other formats, e.g., PKCS#1 (`-----BEGIN RSA PRIVATE KEY-----`) or SEC 1 (`-----BEGIN EC PRIVATE KEY-----`), you can convert them to PKCS#8 using OpenSSL:
[source,shell,indent=0,subs="verbatim,attributes"]
----
openssl pkcs8 -topk8 -nocrypt -in <input file> -out <output file>
----
The following example shows setting SSL properties using PEM-encoded certificate and private key files: The following example shows setting SSL properties using PEM-encoded certificate and private key files:
[source,yaml,indent=0,subs="verbatim",configprops,configblocks] [source,yaml,indent=0,subs="verbatim",configprops,configblocks]
@ -209,11 +229,6 @@ The following example shows setting SSL properties using PEM-encoded certificate
See {spring-boot-module-code}/web/server/Ssl.java[`Ssl`] for details of all of the supported properties. See {spring-boot-module-code}/web/server/Ssl.java[`Ssl`] for details of all of the supported properties.
Using configuration such as the preceding example means the application no longer supports a plain HTTP connector at port 8080.
Spring Boot does not support the configuration of both an HTTP connector and an HTTPS connector through `application.properties`.
If you want to have both, you need to configure one of them programmatically.
We recommend using `application.properties` to configure HTTPS, as the HTTP connector is the easier of the two to configure programmatically.
[[howto.webserver.configure-http2]] [[howto.webserver.configure-http2]]

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