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Recently Mercurial has added certificate validation when connecting to HTTPS servers. I'm trying to clone the wiki repository for a googlecode project at https://wiki.pydlnadms.googlecode.com/hg/, but the certificate is for *.googlecode.com. I was under the impression that this is called a wildcard domain and valid for all subdomains, but I'm receiving the error:

matt@stanley:~/src$ hg clone https://wiki.pydlnadms.googlecode.com/hg/ pydlnadms-wiki
abort: wiki.pydlnadms.googlecode.com certificate error: certificate is for *.googlecode.com

Allegedly I need to add the certificate fingerprint to my hgrc. How do I retrieve this fingerprint from the command line?

Parent Question: Hosting images on Google Code

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5 Answers 5

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The page at http://wiki.debuntu.org/wiki/OpenSSL#Retrieving_certificate_informations lists the command lines for that (and printing out the relevant information). From that page and some of the man pages, it seems like what you want is (for bash):

openssl s_client -connect <host>:<port> < /dev/null 2>/dev/null | openssl x509 -fingerprint -noout -in /dev/stdin

If you want the whole certificate, leave off the | symbol and everything after it.

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  • 1
    to add a bit more detail. <host>:<port> in this example will be "wiki.pydlnadms.googlecode.com:443". mercurial.selenic.com/wiki/… has instructions on how to get this into your .hgrc file.
    – yanokwa
    Commented Mar 18, 2011 at 21:18
  • Hi, got the fingerprint of my server, and added [hostfingerprints] mydomain.com = 09:EA:A1:28:49:24:21... to /etc/mercurial/hgrc, but trying to clone a newely created repo gives me SSL: Server certificate verify failed [command returned code 255 Fri Sep 14 22:31:09 2012] Any clue why? Thanks a lot!
    – razor7
    Commented Sep 15, 2012 at 1:35
  • 3
    The hash method can be specified as a flag (sha1, sha256, md5): ` | openssl x509 -fingerprint -sha256 -noout -in /dev/stdin`
    – None
    Commented Oct 14, 2018 at 14:54
  • 1
    This takes a fingerprint of all the extra garbage, like CONNECTED(00000003), this doesn't make sense to me.
    – ADJenks
    Commented Dec 27, 2018 at 21:20
25

this is also enough:

openssl x509 -fingerprint -in server.crt
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This is an old thread but there is an easier way I found. Assuming you have the crt file:

$ cat server.crt|openssl x509 -fingerprint 
MD5 Fingerprint=D1:BA:B0:17:66:6D:7F:42:7B:91:1E:22:7E:3A:27:D2
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Background

Since Mercurial 3.9, Mercurial requires the more secure SHA-256 fingerprint, as opposed to SHA-1 from prior versions. Jeremiah's answer explains how to compute the SHA-1 fingerprint. As pointed out in J.Money's comment, one must now add the -sha256 flag to get the correct fingerprint.

The new command:

openssl s_client -connect <host>:<port> < /dev/null 2>/dev/null | openssl x509 -fingerprint -sha256 -noout -in /dev/stdin

where <host>:<port> should be substituted as appropriate. (To answer the original question, one would use wiki.pydlnadms.googlecode.com:443, as noted by yanokwa.) You must omit https:// from the URL, otherwise you will get the error Expecting: TRUSTED CERTIFICATE.

One can then add the resulting SHA-256 fingerprint to Mercurial's global settings file (~/.hgrc).

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Since nobody commented on this I wanted to try and clear up some of the confusion regarding subdomains:

the certificate is for *.googlecode.com. I was under the impression that this is called a wildcard domain and valid for all subdomains

You are partially correct. A wildcard certificate is valid for all direct subdomains but not for subdomains of subdomains.

So *.googlecode.com is valid for pydlnadms.googlecode.com but not for wiki.pydlnadms.googlecode.com.

For that you'd need a certificate for *.pydlnadms.googlecode.com or a non-wildcard certificate for wiki.pydlnadms.googlecode.com

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