TL;DR - The server is misconfigured. Either fix the server, pass verify=ssl.CERT_NONE
, or download and pass www.magidglove.com's certificate explicitly.
The problem here is on the server, not the client. The server is only configured to return it's own certificate, which isn't enough for the client to trust it. Servers generally need to be configured to return the full certificate chain.
In order to diagnose this, you can use openssl
to view some raw information about the certificate chain returned:
$ openssl s_client -connect www.google.com:443 -showcerts -servername www.google.com
CONNECTED(00000003)
depth=2 OU = GlobalSign Root CA - R2, O = GlobalSign, CN = GlobalSign
verify return:1
depth=1 C = US, O = Google Trust Services, CN = Google Internet Authority G3
verify return:1
depth=0 C = US, ST = California, L = Mountain View, O = Google LLC, CN = www.google.com
verify return:1
... snipped the rest of the output ...
You can see that 3 certificates were returned by the server, and they were verified in reverse order. The GlobalSign certificate is trusted by the certifi
library, the cert at depth=1
was created by the cert at depth=2
, and the last cert, CN=www.google.com
, was created by the cert at depth=1
.
Now let's compare that to the server you were trying to connect to:
$ openssl s_client -connect www.magidglove.com:443 -showcerts -servername www.magidglove.com
CONNECTED(00000003)
depth=0 businessCategory = Private Organization, jurisdictionC = US, jurisdictionST = Illinois, serialNumber = 00043176, C = US, ST = Illinois, L = Romeoville, O = "Magid Glove and Safety Manufacturing Company, L.L.C.", OU = web site, CN = www.magidglove.com
verify error:num=20:unable to get local issuer certificate
verify return:1
depth=0 businessCategory = Private Organization, jurisdictionC = US, jurisdictionST = Illinois, serialNumber = 00043176, C = US, ST = Illinois, L = Romeoville, O = "Magid Glove and Safety Manufacturing Company, L.L.C.", OU = web site, CN = www.magidglove.com
verify error:num=21:unable to verify the first certificate
verify return:1
You can see a few things from this output:
- The server only returned a single certificate
- The client tried to verify the certificate and couldn't
It requires some knowledge of ssl to know that the reason why it couldn't verify was that it doesn't trust the certificate, but now that we know that, we can see that having the server return the full certificate chain will fix that. I suspect that the reason why chrome and other browsers don't report an error is that the browser itself knows about DigiCert, so it doesn't require a full chain.
verify=False
.