--- title: HTTPS Certificates description: HTTPS Certificates with stancl/tenancy — A Laravel multi-database tenancy package that respects your code.. extends: _layouts.documentation section: content --- # HTTPS certificates HTTPS certificates are very easy to deal with if you use the `yourclient1.yourapp.com`, `yourclient2.yourapp.com` model. You can use a wildcard HTTPS certificate. If you use the model where second level domains are used, there are multiple ways you can solve this. This guide focuses on nginx. ### 1. Use nginx with the lua module Specifically, you're interested in the [`ssl_certificate_by_lua_block`](https://github.com/openresty/lua-nginx-module#ssl_certificate_by_lua_block) directive. Nginx doesn't support using variables such as the hostname in the `ssl_certificate` directive, which is why the lua module is needed. This approach lets you use one server block for all tenants. ### 2. Add a simple server block for each tenant You can store most of your config in a file, such as `/etc/nginx/includes/tenant`, and include this file into tenant server blocks. ```nginx server { include includes/tenant; server_name foo.bar; # ssl_certificate /etc/foo/...; } ``` ### Generating certificates You can generate a certificate using certbot. If you use the `--nginx` flag, you will need to run certbot as root. If you use the `--webroot` flag, you only need the user that runs it to have write access to the webroot directory (or perhaps webroot/.well-known is enough) and some certbot files (you can specify these using --work-dir, --config-dir and --logs-dir). Creating this config dynamically from PHP is not easy, but is probably feasible. Giving `www-data` write access to `/etc/nginx/sites-available/tenants.conf` should work. However, you still need to reload nginx configuration to apply the changes to configuration. This is problematic and I'm not sure if there is a simple and secure way to do this from PHP.