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I am using mkcert to generate a self signed certificate for localhost.

mkcert -install
mkcert localhost

This works fine for the browser but if I try and and do a fetch from node, I get this error:

FetchError: request to https://localhost:52882/ failed, reason: unable to verify the first certificate

I think this is because mkcert is not creating the full chain.

I have hacked around this by using the NODE_EXTRA_CA_CERTS environment variable.

NODE_EXTRA_CA_CERTS="$(mkcert -CAROOT)/rootCA.pem"

and I know there is the process.env.NODE_TLS_REJECT_UNAUTHORIZED = "0"; nuclear approach but I am curious to know how this can be fixed without these.

2
  • Have you tried just manually concatenating the chain/root with the domain-cert into 1 file and using that?
    – Tobias K.
    Jun 23, 2021 at 16:29
  • I love the nuclear approach Sep 19, 2023 at 17:31

1 Answer 1

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+250

It is working perfectly. You have own certificate authority (CA) and that one issues localhost certificate directly. There is no intermediate certificate authority used, so assumption mkcert is not creating the full chain is not correct.

CA cert must be available on your machine and you need to define, which CA certs are trustworthy. NODE_EXTRA_CA_CERTS is exactly that config, where you can allow particular CA cert file.

Of course you can add this custom CA cert to system CA cert stores. Their locations depend on used OS, e.g.:

   "/etc/ssl/certs/ca-certificates.crt",                // Debian/Ubuntu/Gentoo etc.
    "/etc/pki/tls/certs/ca-bundle.crt",                  // Fedora/RHEL 6
    "/etc/ssl/ca-bundle.pem",                            // OpenSUSE
    "/etc/pki/tls/cacert.pem",                           // OpenELEC
    "/etc/pki/ca-trust/extracted/pem/tls-ca-bundle.pem", // CentOS/RHEL 7
    "/etc/ssl/cert.pem",                                 // Alpine Linux

That should be done by mkcert -install.

My guess is that your node is not using system CA store (env variable NODE_OPTIONS=--use-openssl-ca), so only node's own CA certs (e.g. https://github.com/nodejs/node/blob/v14.0.0/src/node_root_certs.h) are trustworthy for the node.

You have option to use system CA cert store (env variable NODE_OPTIONS=--use-openssl-ca or node CLI parameter --use-openssl-ca) or you can allow your custom CA with env variable NODE_EXTRA_CA_CERTS as you did.

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