Releases: FiloSottile/mkcert
Firefox Snap support for Ubuntu 22.04
Firefox packaged in a Snap, which is the default browser of Ubuntu 22.04, is now supported ✅
Fixed a crash when a CSR doesn't have SANs 💥
Calling mkcert
with no arguments only prints the help text 🤫
Pre-built binaries for windows/arm64 and darwin/arm64 🧱
Pre-built binaries are now available at stable URLs like these 🔗
https://dl.filippo.io/mkcert/latest?for=linux/amd64
https://dl.filippo.io/mkcert/v1.4.4?for=windows/arm64
Cleaned up EKUs
The EKU logic is now simpler, and it follows the following rules
- if an IP address, DNS name, or URI SAN is present, serverAuth is included
- if
-client
is used, clientAuth is included - if an email address SAN in present, emailProtection is included
Certificate generation based on CSRs is now consistent with standard certificate generation.
Releases are now built from GitHub Actions.
It's been a while
- Reduce certificate lifetime to 2 years and 3 months
- Detect various flavors of Firefox (#225, #280)
- Build release binary for linux/arm64 (#284)
The Go import path of the module is now filippo.io/mkcert, which should only affect users installing the tool with go get
, which was never a recommended installation method.
The little things
Note: packagers building from source now need to set the version like -ldflags "-X main.Version=$VERSION"
macOS Catalina compatibility, URL and email SANs, and more
macOS 10.15 Catalina introduced certificate lifespan limits which block mkcert certificates. As a temporary measure, mkcert certificates now have a fixed notBefore date of June 1st, 2019. Once the ACME server is implemented, certificate lifespan will be shortened to 3 months. (#174)
Certificates generated by previous versions of mkcert after July 1st, 2019 will not work on macOS 10.15 Catalina, and will have to be regenerated. The root CA is unaffected and there is no need to rerun mkcert -install
.
URL (#166) and email (for S/MIME, #152) SANs are now supported.
Client certificates are now created with a -client
filename suffix, and they claim the serverAuth EKU as well as the clientAuth one.
The certificate subject now includes the full user name, like filippo@Bistromath.local (Filippo Valsorda)
.
SLES, OpenSUSE (#162), Snapcraft (#116), and CentOS 7 (#120) are now supported.
Linux release binaries are now fully static, and will work regardless of the system libc. (#169)
Miscellaneous advanced features
🔬 New advanced options:
-ecdsa
to generate ECDSA private keys-client
to generate client certificates-csr
to sign certificate signing requests$TRUST_STORES
to select what stores to install into
Also, in other news:
- Add "Firefox Nightly.app" support on macOS
- Set the CommonName when generating PKCS#12 files for IIS
-cert-file, -key-file and -p12-file
- Add
-cert-file
,-key-file
and-p12-file
flags - Add some helpful lines to docs and output
- Fix Java failure modes on Windows
Support certutil as installed by MacPorts
nss: use certutil from $PATH if found on macOS (#71) Fixes #70 Thanks to @hostep for testing and fixing the patch.
Four new minor supported targets
- Support the Arch system root store
- Support Java on Windows
- Support the JRE root store
- Support multiple CAs on Linux
Windows, Java and PKCS#12
A round of new supported root stores and formats, all contributions from the community.