In Heroku, my domain name for www.[somesite].com shows an ACM Status of "OK".
I also am using automatically managed SSL.
On Google Domains, I have a CNAME for www pointing to the DNS target.
I also have a synthetic record forwarding # for .[somesite].com to https://www.[somesite].com, with Temporary Redirect, Do not forward path, and Disable SSL.
If I use "Enable SSL" I get an error saying that:
The SSL Certificate for this domain hasn't been created yet.This process may take up to 24 hours to complete.
However, the site does not work. I do not know why Heroku shows that it does nor why it gives a ACM Status of OK.
I have been beating my head against this for several hours and have no idea what to do. Anyone have an idea?
Updated 2021
The following guide will help you to set up a website with SSL and forward all versions of your site to the appropriately secured site (https).
(Heroku) Deploy the site on Heroku (either with CLI or Github integration)
(Heroku) Upgrade to the "Hobby" Dyno (for $7).
(Heroku) Add SSL by going to Settings -> Configure SSL. Choose "Automatically".
(Heroku) Add a domain (on heroku.com) by clicking "Add domain". Be sure to use www in the domain name. So the Domain Name text field would be "www.example.com".
(Google Domains) Add a Custom Resource Record
Name: www
Type: CNAME
TTL: 600
Data: URL from Heroku
For example, behavior-apple-eh2cfqgjkiop23q1wvd4372b.herokudns.com.
(Google Domains) Add a Synthetic Record
Subdomaine Forward
Subdomain: #
Destination URL: https://www.example.com
Permanent Redirect (301)
Forward path
Enable SSL
(Google Domains) If you are using a domain that requires DNSSEC (such as a .dev domain), enable DNSSEC in the DNSSEC section.
You will have to wait about 15 minutes for everything to propagate. At the conclusion of the 15 minutes, you will be able to go to every combination of your site, and it will redirect to https://www.example.com.
Some of the errors you may see along the way are as follows:
ACM Issue
On Heroku:
ACM is failing for 1 domain name
www.example.com Unable to resolve DNS for www.exampe.com
Solution: the reason you are seeing this is because your CNAME is not set up on Google Domains. Complete step (5) above to resolve this issue.
Extra Period Issue
(On Google Domains) "A period keeps getting added to the end of the "Data" section of the URL when I put it in."
Solution: This is expected.
Helpful images
Final Heroku Page
Final Google Domains Page
Resources
Other StackOverflow answer
My root domain isn’t working, what’s wrong?
Heroku Devcenter: Add a Custom Root Domain
Related
I am trying to add a custom domain to GAE but Google is struggling to issue an SSL certificate for the naked domain, as it says the DNS records could not be found.
I have tried to map both the naked domain and the www subdomain. When I entered these in the GAE custom domain section I was given 4xA records (above), 4xAAAA records (above), and 1x CNAME record for the www subdomain.
I've entered all of these records at GoDaddy.
The www subdomain in GAE was able to verify the DNS records relatively promptly but the naked domain has not been able to for 4/5 days now.
When I use a DNS lookup tool to check the A records, for the naked domain I see:
...and the four records provided by GAE are there (the other two can't be deleted or edited at GoDaddy). So why is GAE saying the DNS records cannot be found?
And when I use the same tool to lookup the www subdomain I see:
...which I guess must be correct as the certificate has issue without any problems.
If I remove the naked domain from GAE custom domain mapping then users just see a Google generated 404 error message saying the URL was not found on their servers.
Without the SSL, I can navigate to the naked domain using HTTP and I get redirected to the www subdomain (not sure if this is GoDaddy domain forwarding or Django PREPEND_WWW in action - both are setup). But if I try HTTPS on the naked domain, I get a page cannot be displayed due to failing to establish a secure connection, therefore I really need to get to the bottom of the SSL issuing problem.
I am not sure where I am going wrong and would appreciate some suggestions.
The traffic is confused, that is why the naked domain is not working because it was pointing to 2 separate vendors (server) by using the A record one from godaddy and another one from GAE. What you are doing is correct by adding the A record from GAE to your godaddy DNS. However the A record from godaddy must be deleted.
Based from this link possibly there is a forwarding setup wherein your domain is lock from the godaddy’s A record. It was also mentioned in the link that if you don't have forwarding setup, you can reach for their assistance on this link
Another possible concern is that a preset has been set on the account that permanently forwards your domain. It was suggested to remove the preset or change the settings of the preset to unlock the A record.
I recently bought a domain name at OVH for an app I hosted on Heroku. I then paid for the dynos in order to set an automatic SSL certificate.
Everything seems to me working fine:
Domain Status Last Updated
─────────── ─────────── ────────────
mpjrigot.eu Cert issued 2 minutes
mpjrigot.fr Cert issued 2 minutes
But my URL is still in HTTP. What am I missing?
EDIT
I'm using React.js for this app
I also have a Ruby on Rails back but for nom i'm keeping that on the heroku.app, works fine
2nd EDIT
Using react-https-redirect, force-https or react-ssl-redirect...
Basically, chrome tells me that "this is not a safe space", and that this is a fake https that might want to steal the user's passwords and stuff
So I got an SSL that is set on my HerokuApp,
I got a domain on OVH that points to the IP of the app
But the http isn't secure somehow
I really think I missed something obvious as I'm new to this...
You can add HTTPS to your app with the following methods.
Method1 (Recommended)
Since, you're using rails for the backend, you can configure your rails app to always use HTTPS.
in your production.rb add
config.force_ssl = true
More Info: https://help.heroku.com/J2R1S4T8/can-heroku-force-an-application-to-use-ssl-tls
ActionDispatch SSL: https://api.rubyonrails.org/v6.1.4/classes/ActionDispatch/SSL.html
Method2 (Easy Setup)
You can also signup for cloudflare's free plan and easily setup https redirects with cloudflare's 'Always Use HTTPS' or 'Automatic HTTPS Rewrites' feature.
The 'Always Use HTTPS' feature will redirect all http requests on your site to https address.
The 'Automatic HTTP Rewrites' feature will change the HTTP links on your site to HTTPS links.
More Info here:
Always use HTTPS: https://blog.cloudflare.com/how-to-make-your-site-https-only
Automatic HTTPS: https://www.cloudflare.com/website-optimization/automatic-https-rewrite/
Cloudflare's SSL: https://www.cloudflare.com/ssl/
cloudflare dashboard
What am I missing?
Heroku provides a certificate, so you should be able to access your application using https://. However it does not redirect HTTP requests to HTTPS for you:
Redirects need to be performed at the application level as the Heroku router does not provide this functionality. You should code the redirect logic into your application.
Exactly how you do that depends on the language and libraries or framework that you are using. Several common examples are listed in the link I provided above.
If you edit your question to tell us what technology you have used to build your application I'll be happy to add those details to this answer. In case you are using Scala, please see How to disable HTTP requests on Heroku and/or auto-redirect to HTTPS?
solution
I eventually read about Heroku needing a specific host that takes in the address they tell you to point to when setting a domain name...
So I switched to Gandi for my domain name and set the ALIAS to point to said adress
Works like a charm
I have purchased a domain name successfully on google domains. I have the website and server deployed on Heroku, which has provided us with a DNS target and a positive ACM status. When navigating to the site by clicking the link provided by the google search, SSL is not active. However, typing into the address bar "https" will cause it to use SSL as will just typing [domain-name].ca, BUT typing "http", it will not use SSL. Why is google defaulting to the non-SSL version?
I have set up the synthetic record:
#.[domain-name] -> https://www.[domain-name].ca
on google domains
Shouldn't this forward every request to https?
I do not have any http calls in my code.
Depending on what enviornment you are using, you need to enable force ssl config.
Rails
Use config.force_ssl = true in your config/environments/production.rb or similar.
Node (Express.js)
Use a package to set this up for your app. Some options can be found here: https://www.npmjs.com/search?q=express+ssl
PHP
You can add directives to the .htaccess file at the root of your project to do this. See this SO post for an example https://stackoverflow.com/a/34065445
Django
Set SECURE_SSL_REDIRECT to True.
Flask
You can use https://github.com/kennethreitz/flask-sslify to handle this for you.
Short story: I build a web app, hosted it on Heroku, I have a domain from a Dutch provider "mijndomein.nl" Now I want to use the custom domain for my app.
I have followed the Heroku guide, but without success, I have watched a few videos, but the DNS settings in the videos are not exactly the same as I have at the mijndomein DNS control panel, and since I don't have a lot of experience setting up DNS and domain pointing I can't figure it out for my self. I will provide a screenshot of the mijndomein settings, and probably you will laugh that I haven't figured it out already and tell me how it works.
I'm confused with the * wildcard domain, and if the www (is a subdomain or not) that's not 100% clear in the Heroku guide. Heroku says that wildcard domains are not allowed when using ACM (automatic SSL certificate), but I need to obtain SSL ofc. and mijndomein's base settings looks to be using a * wildcard DNS. How do I set it up correctly so that when I enter:
oppascentrale.nl -> I go to my heroku app with SSL
www.oppascentrale.nl -> I go to my heroku app with SSL
Do I add with or without 'www' in the heroku control panel when adding custom domain?
This is how mijndomein DNS settings looks like when I do a factory reset
I'm also not sure if I can delete some of the DNS settings lines? I can't read anywhere if any of these different settings will interfere with each other.
As you can see in the shot below, Heroku is not exactly clear about how the custom domain should be added, first with, and then without 'www.' - I have tried both, but neither seemed to work with their SSL.
I also never managed to access my app from oppascentrale.nl, Do I some how have to redirect to www.oppascentrale when hitting oppascentrale.nl? And if yes, how do i set up that?
I have my DNS settings as shown in the image
DNS Setting along with an additional CNAME with host www and value as my GitHub page. Next I setup a CNAME entry in my GitHub page with an apex entry to my domain. The issue I face is that whenever I visit my domain with an https protocol, it shows a warning that the connection is not secure. I get the following in Chrome:
NET::ERR_CERT_COMMON_NAME_INVALID
How do I fix this? I have both https and http access for my domain.
UPDATE: Github introduced custom domain support for HTTPS on May 1, 2018.
If you are using GoDaddy and want to upgrade to HTTPS, do the following:
Go to DNS settings for your site in your GoDaddy account.
Remove all existing A records.
Open a terminal and do dig +noall +answer <YOUR-USERNAME>.github.io. You should see a table listing 4 slightly different IP addresses:
On GoDaddy, create 4 new A records, each one pointing to one of the IPs. For host use # and set the TTL to a low user-defined value (if you are in a hurry).
Go to your page repository settings on Github, and clear the custom domain name and save. Wait a while (minutes).
When executing dig +noall +answer <YOUR-CUSTOM-DOMAIN> yields the 4 IP addresses that you entered in the A records, go back to the Github repository settings and re-enter and save your custom domain name (which you just cleared) in the custom domain cell.
Optionally, check the box Enforce HTTPS. But make sure that https://<YOUR-DOMAIN>is responsive first.
Make sure you have a CNAME record in your DNS settings also. Host should be www and it should point to your <YOUR-USERNAME>.github.io.
Make sure there is a file in your website repository named CNAME containing the name of your custom domain (in my case ulfaslak.com).
Reference
EDIT: Please see answer below by Arturo Herrero: https://stackoverflow.com/a/50203412/462015
GitHub pages does not support HTTPS for custom domains.
The only work around for doing so is to use an SSL provider as the middle man, such as Cloudflare. However, this would involve pointing your DNS name servers at Cloudflare's, which takes some time and complicates things.
If you want HTTPS support using GitHub pages you'll have to use GitHub's provided URL instead of your custom domain.
Another great option for static sites if you want custom domain name HTTPS is Amazon Web Services. You could set up an S3 bucket for your static website, configure CloudFront to distribute the static content, point your domain name at the CloudFront distribution, and use a free SSL certificate from Amazon's cert manager. This option comes out to less than $1/Month with a low-traffic website. A great in depth tutorial for that would be here.
I hope this answered your question! GitHub pages is a great hosting option, and it's not the end of the world if you decide to forget about HTTPS.
Custom domains on GitHub Pages gain support for HTTPS since May 01, 2018
https://blog.github.com/2018-05-01-github-pages-custom-domains-https/