I was given a .NET Core project to run in a Linux Docker container to do the build, everything seems to be okay on the docker configuration side, but when I run this command: dotnet publish -c Release -o out
, I get the SSL authentication error below.
The SSL connection could not be established, see inner exception. Authentication failed because the remote party has closed the transport stream.
I did my research and apparently it seemed that I was missing:
the environment variables Kestrel for ASPNET (as per https://github.com/aspnet/AspNetCore.Docs/issues/6199), which I add to my
docker-compose
, but I don't think it is the issue.a Developer .pfx certificate, so I updated my
docker-compose
with the Kestrel Path to the certs file as seen below.
version: '3'
services:
netcore:
container_name: test_alerting_comp
tty: true
stdin_open: true
image: alerting_netcore
environment:
- http_proxy=http://someproxy:8080
- https_proxy=http://someproxy:8080
- ASPNETCORE_ENVIRONMENT=Development
- ASPNETCORE_URLS=https://+;http://+
- ASPNETCORE_HTTPS_PORT=443
- ASPNETCORE_Kestrel__Certificates__Default__Password="ABC"
- ASPNETCORE_Kestrel__Certificates__Default__Path=/root/.dotnet/corefx/cryptography/x509stores/my
ports:
- "8080:80"
- "443:443"
build: .
#context: .
security_opt:
- seccomp:unconfined
volumes:
- "c:/FakePath/git/my_project/src:/app"
- "c:/TEMP/nuget:/root"
networks:
- net
networks:
net:
I re-run the docker container and executed dotnet publish -c Release -o out
with the same results.
From my host I can do this to my local NuGet:
A) wget https://nuget.local.com/api/v2
without issues,
B) but from the container I can't.
C) However from the container I can do this to official NuGet wget https://api.nuget.org/v3/index.json
, so definetely my proxy is working okay.
Debugging SSL issue:
The given .pfx certificate is a self-signed one, and it is working okay from Windows OS (at least I was told that).
strace
shows me from where the certs are being pulled from as below
root@9b98d5447904:/app# strace wget https://nuget.local.com/api/v2 |& grep certs open("/etc/ssl/certs/ca-certificates.crt", O_RDONLY) = 3
I exported the .pfx as follows:
openssl pkcs12 -in ADPRootCertificate.pfx -out my_adp_dev.crt
then moved it to/usr/local/share/ca-certificates/
, removed the private part, just left in the file public part (-----BEGIN CERTIFICATE----- -----END CERTIFICATE-----
) executedupdate-ca-certificates
and I could see1 added
, double checked in file/etc/ssl/certs/ca-certificates.crt
and the new cert was in there.Executed this again
wget https://nuget.local.com/api/v2
and failed.I used OpenSSL to get more info and as you can see it is not working, the cert has a weird CN, because they used a wildcard for the subject and to me this is wrong, but they state that .pfx is working in Windows OS.
root@ce21098e9643:/usr/local/share/ca-certificates# openssl s_client -connect nuget.local.com:443 -CApath /etc/ssl/certs
CONNECTED(00000003)
depth=0 CN = *.local.com
verify error:num=20:unable to get local issuer certificate
verify return:1
depth=0 CN = *.local.com
verify error:num=21:unable to verify the first certificate
verify return:1
---
Certificate chain
0 s:/CN=\x00*\x00l\x00o\x00c\x00a\x00l\x00.\x00c\x00o\x00m
i:/C=ES/ST=SomeCity/L=SomeCity/OU=DEV/O=ASD/CN=Development CA
---
Server certificate
-----BEGIN CERTIFICATE-----
XXXXXXXXXXX
XXXXXXXXXXX
-----END CERTIFICATE-----
subject=s:/CN=\x00*\x00l\x00o\x00c\x00a\x00l\x00.\x00c\x00o\x00m
issuer=i:/C=ES/ST=SomeCity/L=SomeCity/OU=DEV/O=ASD/CN=Development CA
---
No client certificate CA names sent
Peer signing digest: SHA1
Server Temp Key: ECDH, P-256, 256 bits
---
SSL handshake has read 1284 bytes and written 358 bytes
Verification error: unable to verify the first certificate
---
New, TLSv1.2, Cipher is ECDHE-RSA-AES256-SHA384
Server public key is 1024 bit
Secure Renegotiation IS supported
Compression: NONE
Expansion: NONE
No ALPN negotiated
SSL-Session:
Protocol : TLSv1.2
Cipher : ECDHE-RSA-AES256-SHA384
Session-ID: 95410000753146AAE1D313E8538972244C7B79A60DAF3AA14206417490E703F3
Session-ID-ctx:
Master-Key: B09214XXXXXXX0007D126D24D306BB763673EC52XXXXXXB153D310B22C341200EF013BC991XXXXXXX888C08A954265623
PSK identity: None
PSK identity hint: None
SRP username: None
Start Time: 1558993408
Timeout : 7200 (sec)
Verify return code: 21 (unable to verify the first certificate)
Extended master secret: yes
---
I don't know what issue I'm facing, but it appears to be that:
A) the self-signed .pfx was wrongly configured, and now that it is being used in Linux it doesn't work as it should.
B) I need some more config in the container, which I'm not aware of.
What else should I do?
I'm thinking on probaly create other cert to use from Linux hosts.
Is it feasible to create another self-signed cert with OpenSSL for IIS ver 8 and import it to IIS?.
Any ideas are welcome, cheers.