This is a script I call "certdays.sh" which you can call from your regular tests like this:<p>certdays.sh somedomain.com 14<p>If the certificate for somedomain.com is valid less then 14 days, it will fail:<p><a href="https://github.com/no-gravity/certdays" rel="nofollow">https://github.com/no-gravity/certdays</a>
There must be some kind of law "Every company will forget to renew a TLS certificate once"<p>I know I can't throw stones in this particular greenhouse :)
I remember a couple of years ago I was on the top of some old volcano on an island, and I was dictating shell commands to a colleague so that we can quickly fix our expired certificate. Good old days.
Maybe browsers should put up a warning when a certificate is about to expire; say two weeks away. Nobody should let their certificate get that close to expiring, but if it does, you'd rather it generate a lot of visible warnings before simply ceasing to work at all.
Don't see any error. The certificate was renewed after 10 minutes of issue?<p>Validity Not Before 11/2/2020, 12:00:00 AM (Greenwich Mean Time)<p>Validity Not After 11/9/2021, 11:59:59 PM (Greenwich Mean Time)
Once identified, I would expect their "Incident Report" in some way would mention the root cause of the incident. However, that does not seem to be the case here: <a href="https://www.githubstatus.com/incidents/4mzhxxpwgvqg" rel="nofollow">https://www.githubstatus.com/incidents/4mzhxxpwgvqg</a><p>Maybe someone could get fired for this or does it have more to do with Microsoft's stock/public image?