• Hi, Pleskians! We are running a UX testing of our upcoming product intended for server management and monitoring.
    We would like to invite you to have a call with us and have some fun checking our prototype. The agenda is pretty simple - we bring new design and some scenarios that you need to walk through and succeed. We will be watching and taking insights for further development of the design.
    If you would like to participate, please use this link to book a meeting. We will sent the link to the clickable prototype at the meeting.
  • The Horde webmail has been deprecated. Its complete removal is scheduled for April 2025. For details and recommended actions, see the Feature and Deprecation Plan.
  • The ImunifyAV extension is now deprecated and no longer available for installation.
    Existing ImunifyAV installations will continue operating for three months, and after that will automatically be replaced with the new Imunify extension. We recommend that you manually replace any existing ImunifyAV installations with Imunify at your earliest convenience.

Question How to renew the Plesk Certifikate

No - I can't change that because it is the domain of the root serverver provided by Strato

@DieterWerner

If you have access to DNS, you could simply point DNS A records to the IP of your V-Server and use the Let's Encrypt extension.

Just do the following

1 - select a domain that you own and set DNS to point to the IP of your V-Server via an A record, (and)

2 - change the hostname of your V-Server via Plesk Panel to <domain>.<tld>, as chosen in step 1, (and)

3 - do a reboot from the command line, just to make sure, (and)

4 - run the command dig <domain>.<tld> +short, just to verify that your A record and associated IP settings (see step 1) are propagated across the internet, (and)

5 - go to "Tools & Settings > TLS/SSL Certificates > Let's Encrypt (click)" and fill in the right domain (the <domain>.<tld> from step 1) and press OK,

and that should work......... and if it does not, just respond in this thread.

By the way, it is highly recommended to rename the hostname of your V-Server (as opposed to using *.stratoserver.net) AND create an individual A record to point to the IP of the V-Server, since that will also relieve the problems associated with bad reputation that might occur or often occurs with the use of the default domain *.stratoserver.net.

Regards......
 
@DieterWerner

If you have access to DNS, you could simply point DNS A records to the IP of your V-Server and use the Let's Encrypt extension.

Just do the following

1 - select a domain that you own and set DNS to point to the IP of your V-Server via an A record, (and)

2 - change the hostname of your V-Server via Plesk Panel to <domain>.<tld>, as chosen in step 1, (and)

3 - do a reboot from the command line, just to make sure, (and)

4 - run the command dig <domain>.<tld> +short, just to verify that your A record and associated IP settings (see step 1) are propagated across the internet, (and)

5 - go to "Tools & Settings > TLS/SSL Certificates > Let's Encrypt (click)" and fill in the right domain (the <domain>.<tld> from step 1) and press OK,

and that should work......... and if it does not, just respond in this thread.

By the way, it is highly recommended to rename the hostname of your V-Server (as opposed to using *.stratoserver.net) AND create an individual A record to point to the IP of the V-Server, since that will also relieve the problems associated with bad reputation that might occur or often occurs with the use of the default domain *.stratoserver.net.

Regards......
That's a very good 'HowToo' for getting a certificate for a a domain - but it doesn't match my problem.
The domain *.stratoserver.net is just the domain of the virtual server; it contains only CentOs and Plesk. Pleks comes with a self signet certifikcate but it's valid for just one year. So I want to renew it.
 
Back
Top