I am working on a fabric application where I have configured HTTPS. It is throwing an exception though I have a valid installed certificate.
22 Answers
These instructions from this blog worked for me
- dotnet dev-certs https --clean
- dotnet dev-certs https --trust
- Restart VS
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2if this fails (like it did in my case the check out @Stephen's answer ( stackoverflow.com/a/57301251/1796 ) - that worked for me. Commented Sep 18, 2019 at 9:38
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12Restarting VS was necessary for me in addition to these steps Commented May 4, 2020 at 11:04
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1
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1Followed this but still had issues - then did what @hikarikuen suggested (stackoverflow.com/a/64776368/5101) - cleared the localhost personal certificates from the Windows Cert store, and then re-ran above command and everything worked. Commented Feb 5, 2021 at 5:47
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2
Solution
(for Windows, not sure if there's an equivalent issue/solution for other OSs)
In a command prompt or Powershell terminal:
- Run
certmgr.msc
and delete all localhost certificates under both Personal\Certificates and Trusted Root Certification Authorities\Certificates. - Then run
dotnet dev-certs https -t
a single time to create and trust a new development certificate. - Verify by running
dotnet dev-certs https --check --verbose
, or just try debugging your ASP.NET app again.
You may also need to run dotnet dev-certs https --clean
before creating the new certificate.
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3Thanks for this. For my I needed to go and delete all of the "localhost" certs in certmgr.msc -> Personal\Certficates. I had tried all the other "things", and it didn't work until I did this. Commented Jan 28, 2021 at 17:58
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2+1. There were a lot of junk localhost certificates under Personal\Certificates, even after running clean. Thank you.– hcd00045Commented Apr 6, 2021 at 19:49
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1Cleaning the certificates under the certificate manager was also required in my case. May you please rewrite your answer to first provide the resolution steps? In its current form it is likely there are people who go away before reaching the actual solution. (I could edit your answer for doing so, but it may be too much of a change to be done by anyone but the author.)– FrédéricCommented Jan 18, 2022 at 9:25
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2Thanks, the only solution working very for .NET 7 but to do this correctly, after your steps you should close IIS and restart Visual Studio Commented Nov 20, 2022 at 0:09
I am on OSX and dotnet dev-certs https --clean
and sudo dotnet dev-certs https --clean
were not working for me. Finally I was able to fix it with the following steps.
- Go into Keychain Access
- Unlock System Keychain
- Delete the
localhost
certificate - Run
dotnet dev-certs https -t
You should now be able to run without the error.
Edit:
If, after following the above answer, you do run into an error that reads There was an error saving the HTTPS developer certificate...
check out this answer https://stackoverflow.com/a/56709117/621827
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1@Pogrindis I did run as
sudo
and it still didn't work. I had to manually delete it from the Keychain to fix the issue. Commented Aug 1, 2019 at 3:22 -
3
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2This solution worked for me on OS X 10.14.6 with .NET Core 2.1(.301) Commented Sep 18, 2019 at 9:39
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2This solution worked for me too on macOS Monterey 12.1 M1 Commented Jan 19, 2022 at 5:59
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1basically the problem is certificate that are generated using old passwords will not work when the user changes the password, therefore when you delete these old localhost certificates and run the above command it will save it using new password and it will work Commented Jan 4, 2023 at 8:19
For me the problem was resolved by running:
- dotnet dev-certs https --clean
- dotnet dev-certs https --verbose
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The second command reported an error
Unix LocalMachine X509Store is limited to the Root and CertificateAuthority stores.
But completed successfully and fixed this issue.– robCommented May 30, 2023 at 9:53
I had this issue on my Windows 10 system using visual studio. The problem seemed to be that the command used in the GUI to clear the local certs for HTTPS was failing with an error message that I can no longer reproduce.
The solution for me was to open the certmgr for the current windows account and to delete all of the personal localhost certs. There was ~20 certs there for me because I've tried re-creating them many times. After deleting all of those certs I ran my .Net core HTTPS API once more and everything worked!
In summary, open your certmgr for your current user and clear all personal/localhost certs.
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1this worked for me after the other answers didn't. Cleared two sets of localhosts under Personal and Trusted Root Certs.– WernerCDCommented Dec 24, 2020 at 17:56
For me deleting the files under file:\\%APPDATA%\Microsoft\SystemCertificates\My\Certificates
and run in cmd dotnet dev-certs https -t
solved my issue.
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Seems like certmgr.msc failed to delete these files so deleting them manually solved the problem– AntonCommented Nov 8, 2021 at 10:52
If you are visiting this page and if you are unfortunate like me who tried every single solution/approach mentioned on this page but nothing worked, then you may like to know what I did and solved my problem.
I was getting this error from my ASP.NET Core web application no matter how many times I deleted the localhost certificates.
Then, I created a self-signed certificate using Powershell with this command. [I copied this PowerShell snippet from somewhere on the internet. Cannot remember the source.] First, make sure that you have a writable location on your computer at C:\temp\. (You can use any other path as long as it can be read by your web app)
$cert = New-SelfSignedCertificate -DnsName mydemowebapp.net -CertStoreLocation cert:\LocalMachine\My
$pwd = ConvertTo-SecureString -String "MyPassword" -Force -AsPlainText
Export-PfxCertificate -Cert $cert -FilePath C:\temp\cert.pfx -Password $pwd
Then, in my appsertings.Development.json, I added this entry.
"Kestrel": {
"EndPoints": {
"Https": {
"Url": "https://localhost:5000",
"Certificate": {
"Path": "C:\\temp\\cert.pfx",
"Password": "MyPassword",
"AllowInvalid": "true"
}
}
}
}
Ran the application, boom! problem solved. I used the same URL https://localhost:5000 as I found in my LaunceSettings.
I hate a solution like this, but at least I could continue my development with such a solution. I do not know what really happened recently that I had to face this issue. Was that a windows update? or something else? I don't know. I did not face this issue before, until recently. And yes, I remembered to run the Website in Kestrel rather than IIS.
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Nice. I was on day two of a POC run, and this was the only thing that worked. However, I put it in my appsettings.json. I think this is also a nice solution because it paves the way for what one might have to do in a production situation. Worried about a security breach because you put a password in the appsettings.json? You can also put this in code, opening up options for getting a password in there. learn.microsoft.com/en-us/aspnet/core/fundamentals/servers/… Commented Dec 15, 2023 at 9:04
I'm on a Mac (macOS 12.6.7) trying to run a ASP.NET Core website project in VS Code, and none of the above answers worked fully for me. Only almost.
How I made it work. Run the following commands in the terminal:
- Clean the ASP.NET Core project:
dotnet clean
- Clear existing certificate:
dotnet dev-certs https --clean
- Create a fresh certificate:
dotnet dev-certs https --trust
Now I was able to run the project with dotnet run
and reloading the browser.
PS: If you're lazy, you can also chain the commands like this: dotnet clean && dotnet dev-certs https --clean && dotnet dev-certs https --trust
In windows, dotnet dev-certs https --clean
doesn't work for me, I have to delete these localhost certs manually.
- Open certmgr.msc
- Delete all localhost certs under 'Trusted Root Certification Authorities/Certificates'
- Run
dotnet dev-certs https -t
Open RUN , then type mmc.exe, then
double click certificate
Delete localhost cert in both folders
then open your powershell
dotnet dev-certs https --clean
dotnet dev-certs https
dotnet dev-certs https --trust
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Couldn't figure out why the localhost cert wasn't showing for me, then this answer solved it. Be sure to select my user when double clicking the certificates to add for snap-in. Thank you. Commented Apr 14, 2023 at 5:30
Generate a new certificate:
$ dotnet dev-certs https --trust
The HTTPS developer certificate was generated successfully.
I had a similar (but not exactly the same) problem.
With 2.1 you have to configure your certificate.
I do this now completely in appsettings.json.
You can find my posting here:
Configure self hosting Kestrel App with certificate for https (internet web server)
Only have a look to the solution...
If dotnet dev-certs https --clean
not working.
- Open Run and open mmc.exe
- Inside MMC from File menu click on Add/Remove Snap-in.
- In the add/remove snap-in window, find certificates in available snap-ins and add it to the selected
- Pick User account
- In the console root -> Certificates Current User -> Personal click on Certificates
- You will see the list of issued and installed certificates for the current user. DON’T remove or change any certificates you don’t know, only remove certificates related to self-sign localhost ASP.NET Core.
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Thanks for this. It got me looking where I needed to look. I found a bunch of certificates in AppData\Roaming\ASP.NET\Https. There was a certificate for each of my web projects. I deleted them all. After deleting, my containers are finding valid developer SSL certificates. Commented Jul 26 at 18:39
If you want to work with an environment that is not Development, don't forget that user secrets are only added automatically when env is Development.
You can use the AddUserSecrets methods to resolve this :
public static IHostBuilder CreateHostBuilder(string[] args) =>
Host.CreateDefaultBuilder(args)
.ConfigureWebHostDefaults(webBuilder =>
{
webBuilder.ConfigureAppConfiguration((hostingContext, builder) =>
{
var env = hostingContext.HostingEnvironment;
if (env.IsEnvironment("Local"))
{
builder.AddUserSecrets<Startup>();
}
})
.UseStartup<Startup>();
});
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No need to create local variable, you can write check condition inline Commented Nov 25, 2020 at 18:47
One more detail - If you generally log in as a normal (non-admin) user, do NOT run the "dotnet dev-certs https" commands from an admin command prompt if you have a separate admin-level identity. Run them in a normal command prompt under your normal login. Ask me how I know. :-P
If you run these commands from an elevated command prompt (using a distinctly separate admin identity) you will experience the following:
- "dotnet dev-certs https --trust" will work just fine
- "dotnet dev-certs https --check --verbose" will tell you that everything is fine
- VS Code will continue to spit out the "Unable to configure HTTPS endpoint ..." error when you try to start the debugger
- You will continue to get "Certificate Not Trusted" warnings from your browser.
If you see these issues, run the "dotnet dev-certs https" commands from a normal command prompt. Fixed it for me. Hope this helps someone without spending the time that I did on this!
I had the same issue, but none of the answers here helped. I figured out that I was missing line in configuration which caused it. (I was running asp.net through docker compose) The missing line was:
ASPNETCORE_URLS=https://+:443;http://+:80
in docker-compose file:
version: '3.4'
services:
webapplication1:
environment:
- ASPNETCORE_ENVIRONMENT=Development
- ASPNETCORE_URLS=https://+:443;http://+:80
ports:
- "80"
- "443"
volumes:
- ${APPDATA}/Microsoft/UserSecrets:/root/.microsoft/usersecrets:ro
- ${APPDATA}/ASP.NET/Https:/root/.aspnet/https:ro
Not sure if this will help anybody else but I had exactly this issue on my Mac. I have the project in Dropbox and so it is shared across machines, on the '2nd' machine I had to go in and manually delete the 'obj' and 'bin' folders, then re-run the application and it all worked
I ran into this problem and my solution was to restart. When I did and then reopened Visual Studio 2019, it asked me to accept a new SSL certificate. After that, I was able to run my program.
When I tried everything, I still got ERR_SSL_VERSION_OR_CIPHER_MISMATCH
.
You can try to delete bin
and obj
directories of all projects, then run dotnet restore
.
Working for me.
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1Isn't that what @Kevin Jones' answer already suggests? Commented Dec 22, 2022 at 0:54
If you're using node, and your localhost certificate expired, your .key
and .pem
files will no longer be valid. So you need to remove & regenerate them. In you have "prestart": "node aspnetcore-https"
in your package.json
, this will automatically regenerate them for you, using the new (valid) localhost certificate (after running the dotnet dev-certs https --trust
command)
If you wanted to get rid of this issue,then in launchsettings.json change "useSSL": false
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1Like seriously do you want to pretend the world is all secure out there ? This may work for a school project to teach elements, or temporarily for debugging purpose. But certainly is not a solution.– Sold OutCommented Oct 3, 2022 at 7:46
I commented following line in 'Startup.cs' file, and it worked for me.
app.UseHttpsRedirection();
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1
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3commenting out this could help to get unblocked, in my project this was not the issue, manually had to update properties/launchSettings.json, remove from there the https url "applicationUrl": "localhost:5094", I know this is not the fix but while developing It is valid to use http only Commented May 7, 2021 at 4:39