Skip to content

Docker container for creating valid local ssl certificates

License

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

strangegrafix/docker-mkcert

 
 

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 

History

5 Commits
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

docker-mkcert

Instead of installing mkcert package on my local machine, I prefer to use mkcert as a service.

A docker container running mkcert to have your own valid ssl certificates for your local development container based environment.

Create a shared volume between your mkcert & your local container


docker volume create --name mkcert-data

Now run mkcert container with your local domain name. For eg: dev.localhost.com


docker run -d -e domain=dev.localhost.com --name mkcert -v mkcert-data:/root/.local/share/mkcert vishnunair/docker-mkcert

For multiple domains, specify it as an environment variable like below:


docker run -d -e domain=api.staging.com,dev.localhost.com,stg.localhost.com --name mkcert -v mkcert-data:/root/.local/share/mkcert vishnunair/docker-mkcert

Connecting mkcert container with your local development environment.

Once the mkcert is up & running, connect your development environment to the shared volume you create & mount it to the location where you specify your ssl files.

For example: I am using a Dockerfile.dev to run a simple http server in go

I am mounting /tmp directory to the shared volume because in dev.go file, I specify where to look for the ssl certs.


docker build -f Dockerfile.dev -t=vishnunair/docker-mkcert-dev .

docker run -d -p 443:443 --name mkcert-dev -v mkcert-data:/tmp -it vishnunair/docker-mkcert-dev

Now you need to add the mkcert root keys to your system key chain:

For eg: If you're using MAC OSX


⇒  mkdir ~/Documents/root-ca ## You create a directory to store your mkcert certificates

⇒  docker cp mkcert:/root/.local/share/mkcert ~/Documents/root-ca ## You copy your mkcert keys from your docker container to your localhost

⇒  sudo security add-trusted-cert -d -r trustRoot -k /Library/Keychains/System.keychain ~/Documents/root-ca/mkcert/rootCA.pem

If everything goes well, You see something like this

About

Docker container for creating valid local ssl certificates

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • Go 58.0%
  • Dockerfile 42.0%