Please fill out the fields below so we can help you better. Note: you must provide your domain name to get help. Domain names for issued certificates are all made public in Certificate Transparency logs (e.g. crt.sh | example.com), so withholding your domain name here does not increase secrecy, but only makes it harder for us to provide help.
The operating system my web server runs on is (include version):
My hosting provider, if applicable, is: domeneshop.no
I can login to a root shell on my machine (yes or no, or I don't know):
I'm using a control panel to manage my site (no, or provide the name and version of the control panel):
The version of my client is (e.g. output of certbot --version or certbot-auto --version if you're using Certbot):
I am a complete n00b at this.
Person who set this up no longer works at the company, so any email notification about revocation has probably been sent to a non-valid email.
We have an Azure Blob storage with a filemage.io interface.
I don't even know where to begin to renew the certificate.
The documentation on using Let's Encrypt with Filemage seems to be here at
However, there was an issue where many certificates were revoked early in January of this year:
There is not yet a widely-supported way that Let's Encrypt users' software can find out about this kind of unusual situation automatically. Although hopefully there will be in the future (that's a separate discussion).
Therefore, many users have had to manually initiate early renewals in their software. While there are instructions on this forum for how to do that with many kinds of software, it seems that Filemage is unusual enough that nobody has researched or described the process here yet.
Since the Filemage documentation on their site also does not make clear how to do this, I would suggest writing to the Filemage creators via the e-mail address listed at
You can point them to the thread above and let them know that you need to trigger an early certificate renewal due to an unexpected certificate revocation by the CA. Hopefully they can give you straightforward instructions, and, if you wouldn't mind, you could post them back here to help other people who might be in the same situation.