The module you need to solve node's SSL woes when including a custom certificate.
Go to file
AJ ONeal 2f03e83ff9 add wiki 2018-10-19 03:57:15 +00:00
pems remove pem files 2014-06-17 20:00:42 -06:00
.gitignore ignore mozilla downloaded file 2014-06-17 20:39:24 -06:00
AUTHORS created module. yay. 2014-03-07 17:14:13 -07:00
LICENSE Initial commit 2014-03-07 15:41:01 -08:00
Painless-Self-Signed-Certificates-in-node.js.md add wiki 2018-10-19 03:57:15 +00:00
README.md v1.2.5 2018-02-13 11:55:22 -07:00
ca-store-generator.js use tpl file, add .create(), minor cleanup 2016-10-20 11:57:26 -06:00
latest.js updated README, latest CAs 2016-10-20 12:28:59 -06:00
package.json v1.2.5 2018-02-13 11:55:22 -07:00
ssl-root-cas.js v1.2.5 2018-02-13 11:55:22 -07:00
ssl-root-cas.tpl.js typo fix 2016-10-20 12:32:37 -06:00
test.js v1.2.5 2018-02-13 11:55:22 -07:00

README.md

IMPORTANT: Try this first

2015-Jul-13: I just discovered that the most common reason you would have the kind of problems this module solves is actually due to failing to properly bundle the Intermediate CAs with the server certificate.

Incorrect Example

// INCORRECT (but might still work)
var server https.createServer({
  key: fs.readFileSync('privkey.pem', 'ascii')
, cert: fs.readFileSync('cert.pem', 'ascii')   // a PEM containing ONLY the SERVER certificate
});

Correct Example

// CORRECT (should always work)
var server https.createServer({
  key: fs.readFileSync('privkey.pem', 'ascii')
, cert: fs.readFileSync('fullchain.pem', 'ascii') // a PEM containing the SERVER and ALL INTERMEDIATES
});
# Test your HTTPS effortlessly
npm -g install serve-https

serve-https --servername example.com --cert ./fullchain.pem --key ./privkey.pem

You can debug the certificate chain with openssl:

openssl s_client -showcerts \
  -connect example.com:443 \
  -servername example.com

Example fullchain.pem

cat \
 cert.pem \
 intermediate-twice-removed.pem \
 interemediate-once-removed.pem \
 > fullchain.pem

Note that you should not include the root.pem in the bundle and that the bundle should be constructed with the least authoritative certificate first - your server's certificate, followed by the furthest removed intermediate, and then the next closest to the root, etc.

Also note that in the case of cross-signed certificates (typically only issued from new root certificate authorities) there may be more than one intermediate at equal distances, in which case either in that tier may come first.

IMPORTANT: Try this next

As of node.js v7.3 the NODE_EXTRA_CA_CERTS environment variable can accomplish what most people intend to do with this package. See nodejs/node#9139

NODE_EXTRA_CA_CERTS='./path/to/root-cas.pem' node example.js

SSL Root CAs

The module you need to solve node's SSL woes when including a custom certificate. Particularly, if you need to add a non-standard Root CA, then this is the right module for you.

Let's say you're trying to connect to a site with a cheap-o SSL cert - such as RapidSSL certificate from name.com (the best place to get your domains, btw) - you'll probably get an error like UNABLE_TO_VERIFY_LEAF_SIGNATURE and after you google around and figure that out you'll be able to connect to that site just fine, but now when you try to connect to other sites you get CERT_UNTRUSTED or possibly other errors.

Common Errors

  • CERT_UNTRUSTED - the common root CAs are missing, this module fixes that.
  • UNABLE_TO_VERIFY_LEAF_SIGNATURE could be either the same as the above, or the below
  • unable to verify the first certificate - the intermediate certificate wasn't bundled along with the server certificate, you'll need to fix that

This module is the solution to your woes!

FYI, I'm merely the publisher, not the author of this module. See here: https://groups.google.com/d/msg/nodejs/AjkHSYmiGYs/1LfNHbMhd48J

The script downloads the same root CAs that are included with Mozilla Firefox, Google Chrome, libnss, and OpenSSL*: https://mxr.mozilla.org/nss/source/lib/ckfw/builtins/certdata.txt?raw=1

* OpenSSL doesn't actually bundle these CAs, but they suggest using them

Other Implementations

Usage Examples

Install

npm install ssl-root-cas --save

Usage

General usage:

'use strict';
var rootCas = require('ssl-root-cas/latest').create();

// default for all https requests
// (whether using https directly, request, or another module)
require('https').globalAgent.options.ca = rootCas;

CERT_UNTRUSTED

CERT_UNTRUSTED

Old Versions of node.js:

If you have to run an old version of node, but need the latest CAs (i.e. you get CERT_UNTRUSTED on well-known and properly configured websites) then this alone should solve your problems:

var rootCas = require('ssl-root-cas/latest').create();

// fixes ALL https requests (whether using https directly or the request module)
require('https').globalAgent.options.ca = rootCas;

var secureContext = require('tls').createSecureContext({
  ca: rootCas
// ...
});

missing Root CA (such as a company ca)

If you have a newer version of node and still get CERT_UNTRUSTED, it's probably because you're testing against a self-signed or company-issued certificate.

Follow the instructions above, but also use addFile, like this:

var rootCas = require('ssl-root-cas/latest').create();

rootCas.addFile(__dirname + '/ssl/00-company-root-ca.pem');

unable to verify the first certificate

unable to verify the first certificate

When you get this error it means that the webserver you are connecting to is misconfigured and did not include the intermediate certificates in the certificate it sent to you.

You can work around this by adding the missing certificate:

'use strict';

var rootCas = require('ssl-root-cas/latest').create();

rootCas
  .addFile(__dirname + '/ssl/01-cheap-ssl-intermediary-a.pem')
  .addFile(__dirname + '/ssl/02-cheap-ssl-intermediary-b.pem')
  ;

// will work with all https requests will all libraries (i.e. request.js)
require('https').globalAgent.options.ca = rootCas;

using the latest certificates

For the sake of version consistency this package ships with the CA certs that were available at the time it was published, but for the sake of security I recommend you use the latest ones.

If you want the latest certificates (downloaded as part of the postinstall process), you can require those like so:

var rootCas = require('ssl-root-cas/latest').create();

require('https').globalAgent.options.ca = rootCas;

You can use the ones that shippped with package like so:

var rootCas = require('ssl-root-cas').create();

require('https').globalAgent.options.ca = rootCas;

API

addFile(filepath)

This is just a convenience method so that you don't have to require fs and path if you don't need them.

require('ssl-root-cas/latest')
  .addFile(__dirname + '/ssl/03-cheap-ssl-site.pem')
  ;

is the same as

var https = require('https');
var cas;

cas = https.globalAgent.options.ca || [];
cas.push(fs.readFileSync(path.join(__dirname, 'ssl', '03-cheap-ssl-site.pem')));
https.globalAgent.options.ca = cas;

rootCas

If for some reason you just want to look at the array of Root CAs without actually injecting them, or you just prefer to https.globalAgent.options.ca = require('ssl-root-cas').rootCas; yourself, well, you can.

inject()

(deprecated)

I thought it might be rude to modify https.globalAgent.options.ca on require, so I afford you the opportunity to inject() the certs at your leisure.

inject() keeps track of whether or not it's been run, so no worries about calling it twice.

Kinda Bad Ideas

    'use strict';

    var request = require('request');
    var agentOptions;
    var agent;

    agentOptions = {
      host: 'www.example.com'
    , port: '443'
    , path: '/'
    , rejectUnauthorized: false
    };

    agent = new https.Agent(agentOptions);

    request({
      url: "https://www.example.com/api/endpoint"
    , method: 'GET'
    , agent: agent
    }, function (err, resp, body) {
      // ...
    });

By using an agent with rejectUnauthorized you at limit the security vulnerability to the requests that deal with that one site instead of making your entire node process completely, utterly insecure.

Other Options

If you were using a self-signed cert you would add this option:

    agentOptions.ca = [ selfSignedRootCaPemCrtBuffer ];

For trusted-peer connections you would also add these 2 options:

    agentOptions.key = clientPemKeyBuffer;
    agentOptions.cert = clientPemCrtSignedBySelfSignedRootCaBuffer;

REALLY Bad Ideas

Don't use dissolutions such as these. :-)

This will turn off SSL validation checking. This is not a good idea. Please do not do it. (really I'm only providing it as a reference for search engine seo so that people who are trying to figure out how to avoid doing that will end up here)

process.env.NODE_TLS_REJECT_UNAUTHORIZED = "0"

The same dissolution from the terminal would be

export NODE_TLS_REJECT_UNAUTHORIZED="0"
node my-service.js

It's unfortunate that process.env.NODE_TLS_REJECT_UNAUTHORIZED = '0'; is even documented. It should only be used for debugging and should never make it into in sort of code that runs in the wild. Almost every library that runs atop https has a way of passing agent options through. Those that don't should be fixed.

Appendix

Other information you might want to know while you're here.

Generating an SSL Cert

Just in case you didn't know, here's how you do it:

openssl req -new -sha256 -newkey rsa:2048 -nodes -keyout server.key -out server.csr

DO NOT FILL OUT email address, challenge password, or optional company name

However, you should fill out country name, FULL state name, locality name, organization name.

organizational unit is optional.

cat server.csr

That created a signing request with a sha-256 hash.

When you submit that to the likes of RapidSSL you'll get back an X.509 that you should call server.crt.pem (at least for the purposes of this mini-tutorial).

You must use a bundled certificate for your server (the server and intermediates, not root) and pass that as the cert option, not as the ca (which is used for peer-certificate checking).

A single HTTPS server

Here's a complete working example:

'use strict';

var https = require('https');
var fs = require('fs');
var express = require('express');
var app = express();
var sslOptions;
var server;
var port = 4080;

require('ssl-root-cas/latest')
  .inject()
  .addFile(__dirname + '/ssl/Geotrust Cross Root CA.txt')
  // NOTE: intermediate certificates should be bundled with
  // the site's certificate, which is issued by the server
  // when you connect. You only need to add them here if the
  // server is misconfigured and you can't change it
  //.addFile(__dirname + '/ssl/Rapid SSL CA.txt')
  ;

sslOptions = {
  key: fs.readFileSync('./ssl/privkey.pem')
, cert: fs.readFileSync('./ssl/fullchain.pem')
};

app.use('/', function (req, res) {
  res.end('<html><body><h1>Hello World</h1></body></html>');
});

server = https.createServer(sslOptions);
server.on('request', app);
server.listen(port, function(){
  console.log('Listening on https://' + server.address().address + ':' + server.address().port);
});

Multiple HTTPS servers using SNI

I know this works - because I just bought two SSL certs from RapidSSL (through name.com), a Digital Ocean VPS, and played around for an hour until it did.

:-)

File hierarchy:

/etc/letsencrypt
└── live
    ├── aj.the.dj
    │   ├── cert.pem        // contains my server certificate
    │   ├── chain.pem       // contains RapidSSL intermediate
    │   ├── cert+chain.pem  // contains both
    │   └── privkey.pem     // my private key
    ├── ballprovo.com
    │   ├── cert.pem
    │   ├── chain.pem
    │   ├── cert+chain.pem
    │   └── privkey.pem
    ├── server.js
    └── ssl
        ├── Geotrust Cross Root CA.txt // the Root Authority
        └── Rapid SSL CA.txt           // the Intermediate Authority

server.js

'use strict';

var https = require('https');
var http = require('http');
var fs = require('fs');
var crypto = require('crypto');
var express = require('express');
var vhost = require('vhost');

  // connect / express app
var app = express();

  // SSL Server
var secureContexts = {};
var secureOpts;
var secureServer;
var securePort = 4443;

  // force SSL upgrade server
var server;
var port = 4080;

  // the ssl domains I have
var domains = ['aj.the.dj', 'ballprovo.com'];

require('ssl-root-cas/latest')
  .inject()
  .addFile(__dirname + '/ssl/Geotrust Cross Root CA.txt')
  //.addFile(__dirname + '/ssl/Rapid SSL CA.txt')
  ;

function getAppContext(domain) {
  // Really you'd want to do this:
  // return require(__dirname + '/' + domain + '/app.js');

  // But for this demo we'll do this:
  return connect().use('/', function (req, res) {
    console.log('req.vhost', JSON.stringify(req.vhost));
    res.end('<html><body><h1>Welcome to ' + domain + '!</h1></body></html>');
  });
}

domains.forEach(function (domain) {
  secureContexts[domain] = crypto.createCredentials({
    key:  fs.readFileSync(__dirname + '/' + domain + '/privkey.pem')
  , cert: fs.readFileSync(__dirname + '/' + domain + '/cert+chain.pem')
  }).context;

  app.use(vhost('*.' + domain, getAppContext(domain)));
  app.use(vhost(domain, getAppContext(domain)));
});

// fallback / default domain
app.use('/', function (req, res) {
  res.end('<html><body><h1>Hello World</h1></body></html>');
});

//provide a SNICallback when you create the options for the https server
secureOpts = {
  //SNICallback is passed the domain name, see NodeJS docs on TLS
  SNICallback: function (domain) {
    console.log('SNI:', domain);
    return secureContexts[domain];
  }
  // fallback / default domain
  , key:  fs.readFileSync(__dirname + '/aj.the.dj/privkey.pem')
  , cert: fs.readFileSync(__dirname + '/aj.the.dj/cert+chain.pem')
};

secureServer = https.createServer(secureOpts, app).listen(securePort, function(){
  console.log("Listening on https://localhost:" + secureServer.address().port);
});

server = http.createServer(function (req, res) {
  res.setHeader(
    'Location'
  , 'https://' + req.headers.host.replace(/:\d+/, ':' + securePort)
  );
  res.statusCode = 302;
  res.end();
}).listen(port, function(){
  console.log("Listening on http://localhost:" + server.address().port);
});

Other SSL Resources

Zero-Config clone 'n' run (tm) Repos:

Articles