I'm having a terrible time getting SSL to verify a certificate. I'm completely ignorant on how certificates work so that's a major handicap to begin with. Here's the error I get when running the script:

c:/Ruby191/lib/ruby/1.9.1/net/http.rb:611:in `connect': SSL_connect returned=1 e
rrno=0 state=SSLv3 read server certificate B: certificate verify failed (OpenSSL
::SSL::SSLError)

Here's the relevant code:

client = Savon::Client.new order_svc

request = client.create_empty_cart { |soap, http|
  http.auth.ssl.cert_file = 'mycert.crt'
  http.auth.ssl.verify_mode = :none
  http.read_timeout = 90
  http.open_timeout = 90
  http.headers = { "Content-Length" => "0", "Connection" => "Keep-Alive" }
  soap.namespaces["xmlns:open"] = "http://schemas.datacontract.org/2004/07/Namespace"
  soap.body = {
      "wsdl:brand" => brand,
      "wsdl:parnter" => [
        {"open:catalogName" => catalogName, "open:partnerId" => partnerId }
      ] }.to_soap_xml

      }

Any help is appreciated.

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I updated Savon to the latest beta 0.8.0.beta4 and HTTPClient to 2.1.5. The error message changed up a bit but still getting the same error. D, [2010-12-01T09:53:58.500216 #3116] DEBUG -- : Retrieving WSDL from: testsite/MyService.svc?wsdl at depth 0 - 20: unable to get local issuer certificate c:/Ruby191/lib/ruby/gems/1.9.1/gems/httpclient-2.1.5.2/lib/httpclient/session.rb :247:in `connect': SSL_connect returned=1 errno=0 state=SSLv3 read server certif icate B: certificate verify failed (OpenSSL::SSL::SSLError) – r3nrut Dec 1 '10 at 16:00
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4 Answers

up vote 2 down vote accepted

My problem is that I am trying to validate a self-signed certificate. All I had to do was put the following code and omit anything to do with validating certificates.

I had to do this for both my SOAP and REST calls that were both experiencing the same issue.

SOAP using Savon

client = Savon::Client.new order_svc

request = client.create_empty_cart { |soap, http|
  http.auth.ssl.verify_mode = :none
  http.headers = { "Content-Length" => "0", "Connection" => "Keep-Alive" }
  soap.namespaces["xmlns:open"] = "http://schemas.datacontract.org/2004/07/Namespace"
  soap.body = {
      "wsdl:brand" => brand,
      "wsdl:parnter" => [
        {"open:catalogName" => catalogName, "open:partnerId" => partnerId }
      ] }.to_soap_xml

      }

REST using HTTPClient

client = HTTPClient.new
client.ssl_config.verify_mode=(OpenSSL::SSL::VERIFY_NONE)
resp = client.get(Methods)
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Putting the http.auth.ssl.verify_mode = :none inside the client.request block does not work for me.

I had to use:

client = Savon::Client.new do |wsdl, http|
  http.auth.ssl.verify_mode = :none
  wsdl.document = #YOUR_WSDL_URL_HERE
end

Using Savon 0.9.9 and Ruby 1.9.3-p125

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check your cert.pem and your key.pem

the cert key should have one

-----BEGIN CERTIFICATE-----
MIIFGDCCBACgAwIBAgIKG1DIagAAAAAAAzANBgkqhkiG9w0BAQsFADCBvDEkMCIG
....
-----END CERTIFICATE-----

your key.pem should have

-----BEGIN PRIVATE KEY-----
CSqGSIb3DQEJARYVY2Fjb250YWN0QGVzY3JlZW4uY29tMQswCQYDVQQGEwJVUzEP
....
-----END PRIVATE KEY-----

and it may have some certs in it but that doesn't matter for this case. (Although it does for me as curl doesn't work without the extra certs) The webservice I am talking to has a good root CA, but the client auth keys are not trusted so this is probably why the extra certs make curl work.

getting those out of your client certificate was what caused me the problems.

here is what worked for me.

openssl pkcs12 -in Client.pfx -clcerts -nokeys -out cert.pem
openssl pkcs12 -in Client.pfx -nodes -out key.pem

each will prompt you for the Import password and you can set a pem password if you want. (you would have to set that in the ruby code later)

require 'savon'
client = Savon::Client.new "https://service/Service.asmx?wsdl"
client.http.auth.ssl.cert_key_file = "key.pem"
client.http.auth.ssl.cert_file = "cert.pem"
client.http.auth.ssl.verify_mode=:peer

p client.wsdl.soap_actions

you can also test with curl

curl -v  -E  key.pem  https://services/Service.asmx?wsdl
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This solution would work fine but at the time I was looking for an answer to address a self signed certificate where I just needed to ignore it. Thanks! – r3nrut Mar 30 at 17:43
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You need to provide the private key file that goes along with your certificate.

http.auth.ssl.cert_key_file = "mycert.pem"

If your private key file is encrypted, you'll need to supply the password too:

http.auth.ssl.cert_key_password = "foobar"
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