There are some tests in the akka code base that test the https functionality. They use the predefined http contexts defined in ExampleHttpContexts.
I have created a small repo that uses the keys from the akka repository (I hope they won't mind) and creates a minimal https server using a self-signed certificate here. Done as a repo instead of as a gist so you can just clone it to get started.
Here is the scala code:
package httpsserver
import java.security.{SecureRandom, KeyStore}
import javax.net.ssl.{KeyManagerFactory, SSLContext}
import akka.actor.ActorSystem
import akka.http.scaladsl.{HttpsContext, Http}
import akka.http.scaladsl.server.Directives._
import akka.http.scaladsl.server.Route
import akka.stream.ActorMaterializer
object Server extends App {
val serverContext: HttpsContext = {
val password = "abcdef".toCharArray
val context = SSLContext.getInstance("TLS")
val ks = KeyStore.getInstance("PKCS12")
ks.load(getClass.getClassLoader.getResourceAsStream("keys/server.p12"), password)
val keyManagerFactory = KeyManagerFactory.getInstance("SunX509")
keyManagerFactory.init(ks, password)
context.init(keyManagerFactory.getKeyManagers, null, new SecureRandom)
// start up the web server
HttpsContext(context)
}
implicit val system = ActorSystem("server")
implicit val materializer = ActorMaterializer()
import system._
val route = Route(complete("ok"))
Http().bindAndHandle(route, interface = "0.0.0.0", port = 8081, httpsContext = Some(serverContext))
}
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