So not sure if this is a bug or intended, I have been looking through the docs and posts here but dont see anything around this @RMerlin. It seems that enabling let's encrypt doesn't honor the wildcard setting on the DDNS page.
As a user, if I am using the ASUS to issue my certs for the one domain and do not enable wildcard on it, current behavior makes sense. However, if I flip on wildcard, I would expect it to also assume that the cert I want is wildcard so that I can use the issued cert across all of my devices (potentially).
My specific use case is slightly different than above in that I am using the RT68 to also be a reverse proxy and I want to use the already issued cert to handle all the apps that sit ON or BEHIND the router. I can point to the existing cert and location under /jffs/.le but since the cert is issued without passing in the *.some.tld and instead for some.tld I am kinda sol :/
As a user, if I am using the ASUS to issue my certs for the one domain and do not enable wildcard on it, current behavior makes sense. However, if I flip on wildcard, I would expect it to also assume that the cert I want is wildcard so that I can use the issued cert across all of my devices (potentially).
My specific use case is slightly different than above in that I am using the RT68 to also be a reverse proxy and I want to use the already issued cert to handle all the apps that sit ON or BEHIND the router. I can point to the existing cert and location under /jffs/.le but since the cert is issued without passing in the *.some.tld and instead for some.tld I am kinda sol :/