CHAT about SSL (https)

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Posted
Rating:
#4662 (In Topic #940)

tips, and solutions to make your site SSL

Hello,

Just spent a bunch of time to get my site working with SSL (https) properly and learned many things and can help anyone else doing the same thing.

I host my site on my own DIY server (ubuntu & apache) so I had to sort it all out but now according to ::

SSL Server Test (Powered by Qualys SSL Labs)

My site has a score of : B

I am curious how your site is ranked?  If you are on a professional server my guess is they have it set up fine.

Another site that gives details about SSL settings of your site:

https://ssldecoder.org/

For fun I tested 

Composr CMS

Open Source CMS with advanced social, interactive and dynamic features. Fully flexible, themeable and extendible: suitable for building powerful websites.

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ranked: B

ssldecoder.org  warns about HTTP Strict Transport Security not set.   OCSP Stapling not enabled.

Some good tutorials I found:

Configuring Apache, Nginx, and OpenSSL for Forward Secrecy | Qualys

Update: This post is obsolete. For guidance on how to deploy TLS securely, please read SSL/TLS Deployment Best Practices, which we always keep up to date. In my earlier blog post, I gave an overview…

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https://www.digicert.com/ssl-support/ssl-enabling-perfect-forward-secrecy.htm#apache_forward_secrecy

ssl - Let's Encrypt - Apache - OCSP stapling - Unix & Linux Stack Exchange




 

Post

Posted
Rating:
#4675
ssldecoder.org  warns about HTTP Strict Transport Security not set.   OCSP Stapling not enabled.

We are redirecting http traffic to https, which is equivalent.
IIRC this is done via our .htaccess file.

I think to get top grade on these kinds of tools you usually need to sacrifice some browser compatibility, or suffer slower initial handshake times connecting. It gets pretty complicated.

Post

Posted
Rating:
#4697
Joe
Mine ranked A.

Not sure why the difference.

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Post

Posted
Rating:
#4700
It's more of a web server configuration thing than a Composr thing. You can configure Apache (for example) to specify exactly what ciphers and protocols to allow. Some of them are very insecure, so having them enabled opens up various kinds of attack.
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