root#sclrdev:/home/sclr/certs/FreshCerts# curl --ftp-ssl --verbose ftp://{abc}/ -u trup:trup --cacert /etc/ssl/certs/ca-certificates.crt
* About to connect() to {abc} port 21 (#0)
* Trying {abc}...
* Connected to {abc} ({abc}) port 21 (#0)
< 220-Cerberus FTP Server - Home Edition
< 220-This is the UNLICENSED Home Edition and may be used for home, personal use only
< 220-Welcome to Cerberus FTP Server
< 220 Created by Cerberus, LLC
> AUTH SSL
< 234 Authentication method accepted
* successfully set certificate verify locations:
* CAfile: /etc/ssl/certs/ca-certificates.crt
CApath: /etc/ssl/certs
* SSLv3, TLS handshake, Client hello (1):
* SSLv3, TLS handshake, Server hello (2):
* SSLv3, TLS handshake, CERT (11):
* SSLv3, TLS alert, Server hello (2):
* SSL certificate problem: unable to get local issuer certificate
* Closing connection 0
curl: (60) SSL certificate problem: unable to get local issuer certificate
More details here: http://curl.haxx.se/docs/sslcerts.html
curl performs SSL certificate verification by default, using a "bundle"
of Certificate Authority (CA) public keys (CA certs). If the default
bundle file isn't adequate, you can specify an alternate file
using the --cacert option.
If this HTTPS server uses a certificate signed by a CA represented in
the bundle, the certificate verification probably failed due to a
problem with the certificate (it might be expired, or the name might
not match the domain name in the URL).
If you'd like to turn off curl's verification of the certificate, use
the -k (or --insecure) option.
Relating to 'SSL certificate problem: unable to get local issuer certificate' error. It is important to note that this applies to the system sending the CURL request, and NOT the server receiving the request.
Download the latest cacert.pem from https://curl.se/ca/cacert.pem
Add the '--cacert /path/to/cacert.pem' option to the curl command to tell curl where the local Certificate Authority file is.
(or) Create or add to a '.curlrc' file the line:
cacert = /path/to/cacert.pem
See 'man curl', the section about the '-K, --config <file>' section for information about where curl looks for this file.
(or if using php) Add the following line to php.ini: (if this is shared hosting and you don't have access to php.ini then you could add this to .user.ini in public_html).
curl.cainfo="/path/to/downloaded/cacert.pem"
Make sure you enclose the path within double quotation marks!!!
(perhaps also for php) By default, the FastCGI process will parse new files every 300 seconds (if required you can change the frequency by adding a couple of files as suggested here https://ss88.uk/blog/fast-cgi-and-user-ini-files-the-new-htaccess/).
It is failing as cURL is unable to verify the certificate provided by the server.
There are two options to get this to work:
Use cURL with -k option which allows curl to make insecure connections, that is cURL does not verify the certificate.
Add the root CA (the CA signing the server certificate) to /etc/ssl/certs/ca-certificates.crt
You should use option 2 as it's the option that ensures that you are connecting to secure FTP server.
I have solved this problem by adding one line code in cURL script:
curl_setopt($ch, CURLOPT_SSL_VERIFYPEER, false);
Warning: This makes the request absolute insecure (see answer by #YSU)!
For me, simple install of certificates helped:
sudo apt-get install ca-certificates
In my case it turned out to be a problem with the installation of my certificate on the service I was trying to consume with cURL. I failed to bundle/concatenate the intermediate and root certificates into my domain certificate. It wasn't obvious at first that this was the problem because Chrome worked it out and accepted the certificate in spite of leaving out the intermediate and root certificates.
After bundling the certificate, everything worked as expected. I bundled like this
$ cat intermediate.crt >> domain.crt
And repeated for all intermediate and the root certificate.
Had this problem after install Git Extensions v3.48. Tried to install mysysgit again but same problem. At the end, had to disable (please consider security implications!) Git SSL verification with:
git config --global http.sslVerify false
but if you have a domain certificate better add it to (Win7)
C:\Program Files (x86)\Git\bin\curl-ca-bundle.crt
It is most likely a missing cert from the server.
Root->Intermediate->Server
A server should send the Server & Intermediate as a minimum.
Use openssl s_client -showcerts -starttls ftp -crlf -connect abc:21 to debug the issue.
If only one cert is returned (either self signed, or issued), then you must choose to either:
have the server fixed
trust that cert and add it to your CA cert store (not the best idea)
disable trust, e.g. curl -k (very bad idea)
If the server returned, more than one, but not including a self signed (root) cert:
install the CA (root) cert in your CA store for the this chain, e.g. google the issuer. (ONLY if you trust that CA)
have the server fixed to send the CA as part of the chain
trust a cert in the chain
disable trust
If the server returned a root CA certificate, then it is not in your CA store, your options are:
Add (trust) it
disable trust
I have ignored expired / revoked certs because there were no messages indicating it. But you can examine the certs with openssl x509 -text
Given you are connecting to a home edition (https://www.cerberusftp.com/support/help/installing-a-certificate/) ftp server, I am going to say it is self signed.
Please post more details, like the output from openssl.
We ran into this error recently. Turns out it was related to the root cert not being installed in the CA store directory properly. I was using a curl command where I was specifying the CA dir directly. curl --cacert /etc/test/server.pem --capath /etc/test ... This command was failing every time with curl: (60) SSL certificate problem: unable to get local issuer certificate.
After using strace curl ..., it was determined that curl was looking for the root cert file with a name of 60ff2731.0, which is based on an openssl hash naming convetion. So I found this command to effectively import the root cert properly:
ln -s rootcert.pem `openssl x509 -hash -noout -in rootcert.pem`.0
which creates a softlink
60ff2731.0 -> rootcert.pem
curl, under the covers read the server.pem cert, determined the name of the root cert file (rootcert.pem), converted it to its hash name, then did an OS file lookup, but could not find it.
So, the takeaway is, use strace when running curl when the curl error is obscure (was a tremendous help), and then be sure to properly install the root cert using the openssl naming convention.
It might be sufficient to just update the list of certificates
sudo update-ca-certificates -f
update-ca-certificates is a program that updates the directory /etc/ssl/certs to hold SSL certificates and generates ca-certificates.crt, a concatenated single-file list of certificates.
I have encountered this problem as well. I've read this thread and most of the answers are informative but overly complex to me. I'm not experienced in networking topics so this answer is for people like me.
In my case, this error was happening because I didn't include the intermediate and root certificates next to the certificate I was using in my application.
Here's what I got from the SSL certificate supplier:
- abc.crt
- abc.pem
- abc-bunde.crt
In the abc.crt file, there was only one certificate:
-----BEGIN CERTIFICATE-----
/*certificate content here*/
-----END CERTIFICATE-----
If I supplied it in this format, the browser would not show any errors (Firefox) but I would get curl: (60) SSL certificate : unable to get local issuer certificate error when I did the curl request.
To fix this error, check your abc-bunde.crt file. You will most likely see something like this:
-----BEGIN CERTIFICATE-----
/*additional certificate content here*/
-----END CERTIFICATE-----
-----BEGIN CERTIFICATE-----
/*other certificate content here*/
-----END CERTIFICATE-----
-----BEGIN CERTIFICATE-----
/*different certificate content here*/
-----END CERTIFICATE-----
These are your Intermediate and root certificates. Error is happening because they are missing in the SSL certificate you're supplying to your application.
To fix the error, combine the contents of both of these files in this format:
-----BEGIN CERTIFICATE-----
/*certificate content here*/
-----END CERTIFICATE-----
-----BEGIN CERTIFICATE-----
/*additional certificate content here*/
-----END CERTIFICATE-----
-----BEGIN CERTIFICATE-----
/*other certificate content here*/
-----END CERTIFICATE-----
-----BEGIN CERTIFICATE-----
/*different certificate content here*/
-----END CERTIFICATE-----
Note that there are no spaces between certificates, at the end or at the start of the file. Once you supply this combined certificate to your application, your problem should be fixed.
According to cURL docs you can also pass the certificate to the curl command:
Get a CA certificate that can verify the remote server and use the
proper option to point out this CA cert for verification when
connecting. For libcurl hackers: curl_easy_setopt(curl,
CURLOPT_CAPATH, capath);
With the curl command line tool: --cacert [file]
For example:
curl --cacert mycertificate.cer -v https://www.stackoverflow.com
Download https://curl.haxx.se/ca/cacert.pem
After download, move this file to your wamp server.
For exp: D:\wamp\bin\php\
Then add the following line to the php.ini file at the bottom.
curl.cainfo="D:\wamp\bin\php\cacert.pem"
Now restart your wamp server.
Try reinstalling curl in Ubuntu, and updating my CA certs with sudo update-ca-certificates --fresh which updated the certs
Mine worked by just adding -k to my curl.
No need to complicate things.
curl -LOk https://dl.k8s.io/release/v1.20.0/bin/linux/amd64/kubectl
Yes you need to add a CA certificate also. Adding a code snippet in Node.js for clear view.
var fs = require(fs)
var path = require('path')
var https = require('https')
var port = process.env.PORT || 8080;
var app = express();
https.createServer({
key: fs.readFileSync(path.join(__dirname, './path to your private key/privkey.pem')),
cert: fs.readFileSync(path.join(__dirname, './path to your certificate/cert.pem')),
ca: fs.readFileSync(path.join(__dirname, './path to your CA file/chain.pem'))}, app).listen(port)
You have to change server cert from cert.pem to fullchain.pem
I had the same issue with Perl HTTPS Daemon:
I have changed:
SSL_cert_file => '/etc/letsencrypt/live/mydomain/cert.pem'
to:
SSL_cert_file => '/etc/letsencrypt/live/mydomain/fullchain.pem'
Enter these two codes to disable the SSL certificate issue. it's worked for me
after a lot of research I found this.
curl_setopt($ch, CURLOPT_SSL_VERIFYHOST, false);
curl_setopt($ch, CURLOPT_SSL_VERIFYPEER, false);
On windows I was having this problem. Curl was installed by mysysgit, so downloading and installing the newest version fixed my issue.
Otherwise these are decent instructions on how to update your CA cert that you could try.
My case was different. I'm hosting a site behind a firewall. The error was caused by pfSense.
Network layout: |Web Server 10.x.x.x| <-> |pfSense 49.x.x.x| <-> |Open Internet|
I accidentally found the cause, thanks to this answer.
All is well when I accessed my site from WAN.
However, when the site was accessed from inside LAN (e.g. when Wordpress made a curl request to its own server, despite using the WAN IP 49.x.x.x), it was served the pfSense login page.
I identified the certificate as pfSense webConfigurator Self-Signed Certificate. No wonder curl threw an error.
Cause: What happened was that curl was using the site's WAN IP address 49.x.x.x. But, in the context of the web server, the WAN IP was the firewall.
Debug: I found that I was getting the pfSense certificate.
Solution: On the server hosting the site, point its own domain name to 127.0.0.1
By applying the solution, curl's request was properly handled by the web server, and not forwarded to the firewall which responded by sending the login page.
I intended to comment on Yuvik's answer but I lack enough reputation points.
When you import a .crt file to /usr/share/local/ca-certificates, it needs to be in the correct format. Some of these have been mentioned earlier, but no one has mentioned the need for only a new line character, and no one has collected a checklist, so I thought I would provide one while I'm at it.
The certificate needs to end in .crt. From Ubuntu's man page:
Certificates must have a .crt extension in order to be included by
update-ca-certificates
Certificate files in /usr/local/share/ca-certificates can only contain one certificate
Certificate files must end in a newline. update-ca-certificates will appear to work if each row contains, for example, a carriage return + a newline (as is standard in Windows), but once the certificate is appended to /etc/ssl/ca-certificates.crt, it still will not work. This specific requirement bit me as we're loading certificates from an external source.
On windows - if you want to run from cmd
> curl -X GET "https://some.place"
Download cacert.pem from
https://curl.haxx.se/docs/caextract.html
Set permanently the environment variable:
CURL_CA_BUNDLE = C:\somefolder\cacert.pem
And reload the environment by reopening any cmd window in which you want to
use curl; if Chocolatey is installed you can use:
refreshenv
Now try again
Reason for the trouble:
https://laracasts.com/discuss/channels/general-discussion/curl-error-60-ssl-certificate-problem-unable-to-get-local-issuer-certificate/replies/95548
So far, I've seen this issue happen within corporate networks because of two reasons, one or both of which may be happening in your case:
Because of the way network proxies work, they have their own SSL certificates, thereby altering the certificates that curl sees. Many or most enterprise networks force you to use these proxies.
Some antivirus programs running on client PCs also act similarly to an HTTPS proxy, so that they can scan your network traffic. Your antivirus program may have an option to disable this function (assuming your administrators will allow it).
As a side note, No. 2 above may make you feel uneasy about your supposedly secure TLS traffic being scanned. That's the corporate world for you.
Had that problem and it was not solved with newer version. /etc/certs had the root cert, the browser said everything is fine. After some testing I got from ssllabs.com the warning, that my chain was not complete (Indeed it was the chain for the old certificate and not the new one). After correcting the cert chain everything was fine, even with curl.
This is ssh certificate store issue. You need to download the valid certificate pem file from target CA website, and then build the soft link file to instruct ssl the trusted certifacate.
openssl x509 -hash -noout -in DigiCert_Global_Root_G3.pem
you will get dd8e9d41
build solf link with hash number and suffix the file with a .0 (dot-zero)
dd8e9d41.0
Then try again.
Some systems may have this problem due to conda environment. If you have conda installed then disabling it may solve your problem. In my case when I deactivated conda this curl-SSL error was resolved. On ubuntu or MacOS try this command
conda deactivate
On Amazon Linux (CentOS / Red Hat etc) I did the following to fix this issue. First copy the cacert.pem downloaded from http://curl.haxx.se/ca/cacert.pem and put it in the /etc/pki/ca-trust/source/anchors/ directory. Then run the update-ca-trust command.
Here is a one liner taken from https://serverfault.com/questions/394815/how-to-update-curl-ca-bundle-on-redhat
curl https://curl.se/ca/cacert.pem -o /etc/pki/ca-trust/source/anchors/curl-cacert-updated.pem && update-ca-trust
However since curl was broken I actually used this command to download the cacert.pem file.
wget --no-check-certificate http://curl.haxx.se/ca/cacert.pem
Also if you were having trouble with php you may need to restart your web server service httpd restart for apache or service nginx restart for nginx.
I've been pulling my hair out over this issue for days on a Wordpress installation attempting to communicate with an internal ElasticSearch service via ElasticPress and a self-signed Root CA managed by AWS ACM PCA.
In my particular case, I was receiving a 200 OK response from the default cURL Transport as well as the expected body, but Wordpress was coming back with a WP_Error object as well that ElasticPress was picking up due to this certificate issue but never logging.
When it comes to Wordpress, there are two things worth noting:
The default cURL Transport for all wp_remote_* calls will look to a CA Bundle located in wp-includes/certificates/ca-bundle.crt. This bundle serves largely the same purpose as what's found under https://curl.haxx.se/docs/caextract.html, and will cover most use-cases that don't typically involve more exotic setups.
Action/Filter order matters in Wordpress, and in ElasticPress' case, many of its own internal functions leverage these remote calls. The problem is, these remote calls were being executed during the plugins_loaded lifecycle, which is too early for Theme logic to be able to override. If you're using any plugins that make external calls out to other services and you need to be able to modify the requests, you should take careful note as to WHEN these plugins are performing these requests.
What this means is that even with the right server setup, hooks, callbacks, and logic defined in your theme, you can still end up with a broken setup because the underlying plugin calls execute well before your theme loads and will never be able to tell Wordpress about the new certificates.
In the context of Wordpress applications, there are only two ways I know of that can circumvent this problem without updating core or third-party code logic:
(Recommended) Add a "Must Use" Plugin to your installation that adjusts the settings you need. MU Plugins load the earliest in the Wordpress lifecycle and will be able to give you the ability to override your plugins and your core without directly altering them. In my case, I set up a simple MU Plugin with the following logic:
// ep_pre_request_args is an ElasticPress-specific call that we need to adjust for all outbound HTTP requests
add_filter('ep_pre_request_args', function($args){
if($_ENV['ELASTICSEARCH_SSL_PATH'] ?? false) {
$args['sslcertificates'] = $_ENV['ELASTICSEARCH_SSL_PATH'];
}
return $args;
});
(Not Recommended) If you have absolutely no other options, you can also append your Root CA to wp-includes/certificates/ca-bundle.crt. This will seemingly "correct" the underlying issue and you will get proper verification of your SSL Certificates, but this method will fail each time you update Wordpress unless you bake in additional automation.
I'm adding this answer because I had thought that I was doing something wrong or wonky in my setup for days before I ever even bothered to delve deeper into the plugin source code. Hopefully this might save somebody some time if they're doing anything similar.
Non of the answers mentioned that might be a role to connect to internal vpn i had this issue before and was asking to be on a private network
in my case while I am setting up SSl webserver using NodeJS the problem was because I did not attach the Bundle file certificate , finally I solved the problem by adding that file as following :
Note : code from aboutssl.org
var https = require('https');
var fs = require('fs');
var https_options = {
key: fs.readFileSync("/path/to/private.key"),
cert: fs.readFileSync("/path/to/your_domain_name.crt"),
ca: [
fs.readFileSync('path/to/CA_root.crt'),
fs.readFileSync('path/to/ca_bundle_certificate.crt') // this is the bundle file
]
};
https.createServer(options, function (req, res) {
res.writeHead(200);
res.end("Welcome to Node.js HTTPS Servern");
}).listen(8443)
In the above, replace the text in bold with the following.
path/to/private.key – This is your private key file’s path.
path/to/your_domain_name.crt – Enter your SSL certificate file’s path.
path/to/CA_root.crt – Provide the CA root certificate file’s full path.
path/to/ca_bundle_certificate – This is the full path of your uploaded CA bundle file.
reference: https://aboutssl.org/how-to-install-ssl-certificate-on-node-js/
I had this problem with Digicert of all CAs. I created a digicertca.pem file that was just both intermediate and root pasted together into one file.
curl https://cacerts.digicert.com/DigiCertGlobalRootCA.crt.pem
curl https://cacerts.digicert.com/DigiCertSHA2SecureServerCA.crt.pem
curl -v https://mydigisite.com/sign_on --cacert DigiCertCA.pem
...
* subjectAltName: host "mydigisite.com" matched cert's "mydigisite.com"
* issuer: C=US; O=DigiCert Inc; CN=DigiCert SHA2 Secure Server CA
* SSL certificate verify ok.
> GET /users/sign_in HTTP/1.1
> Host: mydigisite.com
> User-Agent: curl/7.65.1
> Accept: */*
...
Eorekan had the answer but only got myself and one other to up vote his answer.
Related
I have already tried a lots of options available for this problem on stackoverflow, unfortunately nothing is working for me so far.
It started with composer installation. My env details are listed below:
OS: Windows 7
PHP V 7.1.10, XAMPP version
I am running MINGW64, (which was installed with git v2.1.5)
curl --version
curl 7.56.1 (x86_64-w64-mingw32) libcurl/7.56.1 OpenSSL/1.0.2l (WinSSL) zlib/1.2.11 libidn2/2.0.4 libssh2/1.8.0 nghttp2/1.26.0
Release-Date: 2017-10-23
Protocols: dict file ftp ftps gopher http https imap imaps ldap ldaps pop3 pop3s rtsp scp sftp smtp smtps telnet tftp
Features: AsynchDNS IDN IPv6 Largefile SSPI Kerberos SPNEGO NTLM SSL libz TLS-SRP HTTP2 HTTPS-proxy MultiSSL Metalink
Now here it seems CURL with OpenSSL is installed correctly.
When I was doing composer require or install it was reported me an error as follows:
I searched and figured out that its the local certificate problem so I downloaded the certificate/bundle from https://curl.haxx.se/docs/caextract.html, placed the certificate under C:\xampp\php\extras\ssl\ and changed the PHP.ini
curl.cainfo="C:\xampp\apache\bin\curl-ca-bundle.crt"
openssl.cafile="C:\xampp\php\extras\ssl\curl-ca-bundle.crt"
this never worked. Then I placed my certificates under C:\Windows\System32\curl-ca-bundle.crt, changed the ini still it didn't work.
Then I downloaded cacert.pem from
https://gist.github.com/VersatilityWerks/5719158/download
and repeated steps to make it work with pem file.
However I am afraid still no success here.
Can anyone help me whats wrong going on here? Any help in this direction is much
appreciated.
This is for Windows users, using curl-7.57.0-win64-mingw or similar version.
I have already shared this on another thread, but I think Windows users might stumble upon this question and my answer might help. So, sharing the step-by-step process.
This error basically means, curl is failing to verify the certificate of the target URI. If you trust the issuer of the certificate (CA), you can add that to the list of trusted certificates (e.g. It's a local IIS certificate, and you trust it for your development purposes).
For that, browse the URI (e.g. on Chrome) and follow the steps
Right click on the HTTPS secure padlock 🔒 icon on address bar
Click on certificate, it'll open a window with the certificate details
Go to 'Certification Path' tab
Click the ROOT certificate
Click View Certificate, it'll open another certificate window
Go to Details tab
Click Copy to File... button, it'll open the export wizard
Click Next
Select 'Base-64 encoded X.509 (.CER)'
Click Next
Give a friendly name that you can remember e.g. 'MyDomainX.cer' (browse to desired directory) and save
Click Next
Click Finish, it'll save the certificate file
So what did we do?
We basically saved the root certificate for the desired site (that we actually trust) as a local file. What do we do next?
Add that certificate to the list of trusted certificates
Now open this .cer file and copy the contents (including -----BEGIN CERTIFICATE----- and -----END CERTIFICATE-----)
Now go to the directory where curl.exe is saved e.g. C:\SomeFolder\curl-7.57.0-win64-mingw\bin
Open the curl-ca-bundle.crt file with a text editor (right click and open with...)
Append the copied certificate text to the end of the file. Save
What did we do now?
We added the certificate (content) to curl's main certificate bundle. So now curl will recognize this certificate and allow the domain.
Now your command should execute fine on curl.
Just posting this here for posterity as I spent the last 2 hours on this.
NOTE: only tested on windows.
Make sure you have the curl version with ssl included ( the latest exe installer has it)
Download the cacert.pem from http://curl.haxx.se/docs/caextract.html
Rename cacert.pem to curl-ca-bundle.crt
Move the cacert.pem file to the curl.exe directory.
Fixed.
Users are reporting that they can't view https://blog.za3k.com on OS X.
Chrome and Safari (which use OS X's root certificates fail).
All tests of Linux and Windows have shown no problems. Qualys SSL Labs reports no problems except SHA1 signatures.
Chrome reports NET::ERR_CERT_INVALID and if I click the certificate icon -> View certificate, I see The data does not appear to be a valid certificate
Firefox loads the page correctly.
Safari hangs on visiting the page.
OS X version has no effect that I can tell, but I'm on 10.10.1 personally.
curl https://blog.za3k.com fails with:
curl: (60) SSL certificate problem: Invalid certificate chain
More details here: http://curl.haxx.se/docs/sslcerts.html
curl performs SSL certificate verification by default, using a "bundle"
of Certificate Authority (CA) public keys (CA certs). If the default
bundle file isn't adequate, you can specify an alternate file
using the --cacert option.
If this HTTPS server uses a certificate signed by a CA represented in
the bundle, the certificate verification probably failed due to a
problem with the certificate (it might be expired, or the name might
not match the domain name in the URL).
If you'd like to turn off curl's verification of the certificate, use
the -k (or --insecure) option.
openssl s_client -connect blog.za3k.com:443 reports success
The root certificate is 'StartCom', which should be trusted on mac.
Ideas on how to debug?
What are you seeing in the certificate data which you're returned? Here things are a bit curious -- from a desktop system I see a certificate returned for 'nanowrimo.za3k.com' or 'za3k.com' (but not blog.za3k.com), while obviously SSLLabs sees a certificate which is valid for blog.za3k.com and za3k.com. Could be a DNS aliasing issue, but really the cert should contain a SAN for whatever you mean it to appear as.
openssl s_client -connect blog.za3k.com:443 | openssl x509 -text
Before attempting to solve this, I had no clue how certs or SSL worked, so please bear with my n00b-ness.
I'm currently using the Savon gem (v. 0.9.9) to try and connect to a SOAP-based web-service over HTTPS. However, I'm having a difficult time making successful calls.
As I understand the SSL/TSL protocol, the client sends the initial 'client hello' message to the server, to which the server responds with a 'server hello', which includes the server's digital certificate. The client will check that cert's chain against the local Cert Authority bundle to see if said cert can be trusted. That being said, here's what I've tried.
Update RVM CA certs: At first, I was getting the same error described in this SO thread, and I learned that Ruby checks the CA certs. I also found these instructions on updating the CA certs that RVM uses. So I ran the following in iTerm:
rvm osx-ssl-certs status all
and I got the following output:
Certificates for /Users/user-name/.rvm/usr/ssl/cert.pem: Up to date.
However, this still didn't allow me to successfully make SOAP calls over HTTPs.
Check if remote server's SSL cert is valid: I learned about the openssl CI tool from here, and so I figured perhaps the issue isn't me. Perhaps the issue is with the certificate itself. So I ran the following command in iTerm:
openssl s_client -connect [HOST]:[PORT] -showcerts
In addition to the certificate itself, I got the following in the output:
Verify return code: 18 (self signed certificate)
As I understand it, since this cert is self-signed, then unless it itself was a trusted CA, then of course it could never be verified. So the issue isn't with the certificate, the problem is with my local CA bundle.
Update local CA bundle: As I understand it, cert.pem is a list of trusted CA certs. I actually found two such files on my local machine:
/Users/user-name/.rvm/usr/ssl/cert.pem
and
/System/Library/OpenSSL/cert.pem
I wasn't sure which one I should update, so I ended up copying one of those files into my app's directory, copied & pasted the certificate into new local cert.pem, and tried again. Unfortunately I now get the following:
OpenSSL::SSL::SSLError:
hostname does not match the server certificate
At this point, I'm not really sure what to do since as far as I can tell, the certificate should now be treated as a trusted certificate. Here's my code at the moment:
$SOAP_CORE = Savon::Client.new do |wsdl, http|
http.auth.ssl.ca_cert_file = path_to_local_cert.pm
http.auth.ssl.verify_mode = :peer
wsdl.document = path_to_remote_wsdl_over_https
end
As I understand it, since this cert is self-signed, then unless it itself was a trusted CA, then of course it could never be verified. So the issue isn't with the certificate, the problem is with my local CA bundle.
I'm confused how you come to this conclusion. A self-signed certificate isn't going to verify, so the issue is with the certificate. Updating your CA bundle won't help unless the self-signer ends up in there, which seems silly.
Try turning off verification.
http.auth.ssl.verify_mode = :none
I have downloaded cURL for Windows from here. I selected the Win64 - Generic version without SSL. I try to run curl https://www.google.com from the command line and I get the following error: curl: (1) Protocol https not supported or disabled in libcurl.
Okay! Next, I decide to download the version with SSL and install that. I try to run the same command as above and I get following error:
curl: (60) SSL certificate problem, verify that the CA cert is OK. Details:
error:14090086:SSL routines:SSL3_GET_SERVER_CERTIFICATE:certificate verify failed
More details here: http://curl.haxx.se/docs/sslcerts.html
curl performs SSL certificate verification by default, using a "bundle" of Certificate
Authority (CA) public keys (CA certs). If the default bundle file isn't adequate, you
can specify an alternate file using the --cacert option.
If this HTTPS server uses a certificate signed by a CA represented in
the bundle, the certificate verification probably failed due to a
problem with the certificate (it might be expired, or the name might
not match the domain name in the URL).
If you'd like to turn off curl's verification of the certificate, use
the -k (or --insecure) option.
What should I do next?
Here's what I did to solve the problem.
I got the Bundle of CA root certificates that Mozilla uses from here. I copied the data from the page and saved it in a new file called curl-ca-bundle.crt in the folder where the curl.exe file was. That solved the problem.
Of course, these instructions are also found on the cURL documentation page for SSL certificates, precisely instructions 4 and 5.
Hope that helps.
For various reasons I have created a simple HTTP server, and added SSL support via OpenSSL. I'm using self-signed certificates. IE, Firefox and Chrome happily load content as long as I add the CA to the trusted root CAs.
However, wget (even when using the --no-check-certificate flag) reports:
OpenSSL: error:14094410:SSL routines:SSL3_READ_BYTES:sslv3 alert handshake failure
If I run the OpenSSL client against my server using:
openssl s_client -connect dnvista:82 -debug
I get back:
verify error:num=19:self signed certificate in certificate chain
verify return:0
and then
5852:error:14094410:SSL routines:SSL3_READ_BYTES:sslv3 alert handshake failure:.\ssl\s3_pkt.c:1060:SSL alert number 40
5852:error:140790E5:SSL routines:SSL23_WRITE:ssl handshake failure:.\ssl\s23_lib.c:188:
Do wget and the OpenSSL client simply not work with self-signed certificates?
UPDATE:
For anyone that comes along later, adding this code helped with the OpenSSL client and Firefox:
EC_KEY *ecdh = EC_KEY_new_by_curve_name(NID_X9_62_prime256v1);
SSL_CTX_set_tmp_ecdh(ctx, ecdh);
EC_KEY_free(ecdh);
I checked the man page of wget, and --no-check-certificate only seems to affect the server certificate. You need to specify your self-signed certificate as a valid CA certificate locally.
To do this, specify the certificate as --ca-certificate=... in wget and -CAfile in the s_client case.
You can also install trusted root CA certificates into OpenSSL in one of a number of ways:
Put your CA certificate in /etc/pki/tls/certs or equivalent directory, then create a link based on the certificate hash. See http://gagravarr.org/writing/openssl-certs/others.shtml#ca-openssl for details.
Append your CA certificate to /etc/pki/tls/certs/ca-bundle.crt, /etc/pki/tls/cert.pem, or equivalent CA bundle.