_egrep_o() function accepts extended regex and on systems that do not have egrep uses sed to emulate egrep.
This is failing on the specific regex I was using before my last commit... ae66c6f0b4
The problem is that I fixed it by passing in non-extended regex which then fails on systems that do have egrep. So I am no longer using _egrep_o.
We have a few domains that ends the same. For example :
iperfony.com
perfony.com
The problem was in the _get_root functions, when getting the domain_id :
only the first result "iperfony.com" was returned, because "perfony.com"
is contained in the "iperfony.com" string.
The correction consist of being strict in the regex, adding a slash (/)
so that it will only match on ".*/(perfony.com).*" and not
".*(perfony.com).*".
Please remove the phrase `No news is good news.` as it suggests to decide to go on with a bad operational habit.
Why I am stating this is because that `no news` also could mean that:
- your `cron` daemon stopped working,
- your MTA has issues (in case or mail notifications of course),
- anything in between the host running `acme.sh` and your client went wrong.
(... and probably you will not notice in time if `acme.sh` would otherwise send an error notification (if it runs anyway))
If you expect a daily mail (using `--notify-level 3`) you can always be sure that `acme.sh` has ran successfully before. You can also tick the `acme.sh` checkbox in the daily operational report of your enterprise. ;)