Let's Encrypt root CA expiry

by edk

Hello,

The root CA for most Let’s Encrypt certificates expired today. Just about everyone was waiting for this, but in our case we felt there was nothing for us to do but wait and see what happened; LE’s plan for dealing with the expiration seemed solid enough. Oops.

So what was the plan? LE have continued to provide, in the default chain in their API, a version of their CA cert that’s signed by the expiring root CA. (This is known as cross-signing). This was done to provide a workaround for some devices (as far as I know, mostly very old Androids) and was presumably tested against web browsers, which regularly update their TLS libraries.

Not all other software does. Serving the cross-signed root in our chain broke Hexchat on Windows, amongst other software combinations, because Hexchat uses a version of OpenSSL that doesn’t search exhaustively for a correct validation path if it’s served a chain that is (as in this instance) trusted but invalid.

We’ve chosen to remove the cross-signed root from our chains for now, fixing the clients that we’ve been able to test. This will be subject to review based on your feedback, so please let us know if you were relying on the cross-signed root. We can be reached at [email protected]; you can of course disable validation or connect insecurely as a workaround, but please weigh any such workaround against the security risks it carries.

As always, thanks for using Libera Chat.