1761

I have created a self-signed SSL certificate for the localhost CN. Firefox accepts this certificate after initially complaining about it, as expected. Chrome and IE, however, refuse to accept it, even after adding the certificate to the system certificate store under Trusted Roots. Even though the certificate is listed as correctly installed when I click "View certificate information" in Chrome's HTTPS popup, it still insists the certificate cannot be trusted.

What am I supposed to do to get Chrome to accept the certificate and stop complaining about it?

7
  • 17
    When you say Firefox complains about it initially, do you mean that it asks you to add a certificate exception? This shouldn't happen if the certificate is correctly installed. It sounds to me that all three browsers are complaining, but Firefox allows you to cancel its complaint. I'm posting this as a comment as I don't have a specific answer, but I have done exactly this and it works fine in all three browsers. I would suggest that you try and get it working on IE first, and then once that is happy worry about the other two. Sorry I couldn't be of more help! Sep 28, 2011 at 8:49
  • 1
    You have to create a well formed certificate, including the way DNS names are presented. OpenSSL does not present them in a way that satisfies the browsers out-of-the-box. See How to create a self-signed certificate with openssl?.
    – jww
    Jan 13, 2015 at 23:33
  • 6
    Firefox does not use the system certificate store.
    – curiousguy
    Aug 9, 2015 at 1:56
  • 6
    If your cert's signature uses SHA-1, recent versions of Chrome (circa 57) will display warnings even if you've been able to add your custom cert successfully. Regardless, the "Security" panel of the developer tools will say more specifically what the problem is e.g.: net::ERR_CERT_WEAK_SIGNATURE_ALGORITHM. Apr 26, 2017 at 3:40
  • 1
    Type thisisunsafe in chrome. This has been changed Mar 7, 2018 at 3:26

52 Answers 52

1255

For localhost only (Chrome 119 and above)

  1. Simply visit this link in your Chrome:

    chrome://flags/#temporary-unexpire-flags-m118
    
  2. You should see highlighted text saying:

    Temporarily unexpire flags that expired as of M118. These flags will be removed soon. – Mac, Windows, Linux, ChromeOS, Android, Fuchsia, Lacros

  3. Click Enable Then relauch Chrome.

For localhost only (Chrome 118 and below)

  1. Simply visit this link in your Chrome:

    chrome://flags/#allow-insecure-localhost
    
  2. You should see highlighted text saying:

    Allow invalid certificates for resources loaded from localhost

  3. Click Enable.

Options for other sites

24
  • 3
    Disables the warning...but also the cache! bugs.chromium.org/p/chromium/issues/detail?id=103875
    – Hugo Wood
    Aug 29, 2016 at 20:11
  • 6
    this won't work if you're using chrome in Incognito mode (to switch identities for eg) but very clean otherwise
    – baywet
    Jan 4, 2018 at 18:30
  • 10
    This - if you can stand the annoying red Not Secure msg. Otherwise it's hours of mysterious openssl incantations then trying to deal with the internal cert manager in Chrome.
    – timbo
    Jun 21, 2018 at 9:43
  • 71
    I don't know why this answer has been voted but there is a difference between Invalid certificate and self-signed certificate. The question is about self signed cert.
    – Mehdi
    Aug 24, 2018 at 13:37
  • 7
    Did not work for me at all. What worked for me was to generate a self-signed certificate including subjectAltName, as explained by this answer: stackoverflow.com/a/42917227/2873507 Jun 10, 2019 at 17:15
575

This worked for me:

  1. Using Chrome, hit a page on your server via HTTPS and continue past the red warning page (assuming you haven't done this already).
  2. Open up Chrome Settings > Show advanced settings > HTTPS/SSL > Manage Certificates.
  3. Click the Authorities tab and scroll down to find your certificate under the Organization Name that you gave to the certificate.
  4. Select it, click Edit (NOTE: in recent versions of Chrome, the button is now "Advanced" instead of "Edit"), check all the boxes and click OK. You may have to restart Chrome.

You should get the nice green lock on your pages now.

EDIT: I tried this again on a new machine and the certificate did not appear on the Manage Certificates window just by continuing from the red untrusted certificate page. I had to do the following:

  1. On the page with the untrusted certificate (https:// is crossed out in red), click the lock > Certificate Information. NOTE: on newer versions of chrome, you have to open Developer Tools > Security, and select View certificate.
  2. Click the Details tab > Export. Choose PKCS #7, single certificate as the file format.
  3. Then follow my original instructions to get to the Manage Certificates page. Click the Authorities tab > Import and choose the file to which you exported the certificate, and make sure to choose PKCS #7, single certificate as the file type.
  4. If prompted certification store, choose Trusted Root Certificate Authorities
  5. Check all boxes and click OK. Restart Chrome.
4
  • Alternate step 2: navigate to chrome://settings/certificates. Also if you've been messing with generating your self-signed cert and have made more than one, try using this page to locate and delete a previously imported cert, and then re-import.
    – jws
    Apr 16, 2021 at 14:30
  • 9
    chrome://settings/certificates no longer works, and there is no Authorities tab in Chrome settings > Security > Manage certificates. Has anyone got updated instructions?
    – tolache
    Jan 17, 2022 at 12:12
  • 1
    chrome://settings/certificates does not exist fro Chrome under Windows. The certificates section merely opens the Windows cert-chain tool – Chrome does not seem to have an own storeage for certs un der Windows
    – feeela
    Jan 25, 2022 at 12:28
  • The EDIT steps of original answer worked for me using Chrome Version 99.0.4844.51. To save as PKCS #7, single certificate I used .p7b extension and imported as described here.
    – lucrp
    Mar 9, 2022 at 14:23
469

With only 5 openssl commands, you can accomplish this.

(Please don't change your browser security settings.)

With the following code, you can (1) become your own CA, (2) then sign your SSL certificate as a CA. (3) Then import the CA certificate (not the SSL certificate, which goes onto your server) into Chrome/Chromium. (Yes, this works even on Linux.)

You can just copy the code below into a new file (generate_certs.sh for example), update the variable NAME and the DNS.2 and IP.1 and save the file. Make it executable (chmod +x generate_certs.sh) and run it and that is it. You will have at the end the myCA.pem, $NAME.crt, and $NAME.key generated for you.

NB: For Windows, some reports say that openssl must be run with winpty to avoid a crash.

######################
# Become a Certificate Authority
######################

# Generate private key
openssl genrsa -des3 -out myCA.key 2048
# Generate root certificate
openssl req -x509 -new -nodes -key myCA.key -sha256 -days 825 -out myCA.pem

######################
# Create CA-signed certs
######################

NAME=mydomain.example # Use your own domain name
# Generate a private key
openssl genrsa -out $NAME.key 2048
# Create a certificate-signing request
openssl req -new -key $NAME.key -out $NAME.csr
# Create a config file for the extensions
>$NAME.ext cat <<-EOF
authorityKeyIdentifier=keyid,issuer
basicConstraints=CA:FALSE
keyUsage = digitalSignature, nonRepudiation, keyEncipherment, dataEncipherment
subjectAltName = @alt_names
[alt_names]
DNS.1 = $NAME # Be sure to include the domain name here because Common Name is not so commonly honoured by itself
DNS.2 = bar.$NAME # Optionally, add additional domains (I've added a subdomain here)
IP.1 = 192.168.0.13 # Optionally, add an IP address (if the connection which you have planned requires it)
EOF
# Create the signed certificate
openssl x509 -req -in $NAME.csr -CA myCA.pem -CAkey myCA.key -CAcreateserial \
-out $NAME.crt -days 825 -sha256 -extfile $NAME.ext

Recap

  1. Become a CA.
  2. Sign your certificate using your CA cert+key.
  3. Import myCA.pem as an "Authority" (not into "Your Certificates") in your Chrome settings (Settings > Manage certificates > Authorities > Import).
  4. Use the $NAME.crt and $NAME.key files in your server.

You can check your work to ensure that the certificate is built correctly:

openssl verify -CAfile myCA.pem -verify_hostname bar.mydomain.example mydomain.example.crt

Extra steps for Mac

  1. Import the CA cert at "File > Import file", then also find it in the list, right click it, expand "> Trust", and select "Always"
  2. Add extendedKeyUsage=serverAuth,clientAuth below basicConstraints=CA:FALSE, and make sure you set the "CommonName" to the same as $NAME when it asks for setup.

Extra steps for Windows

  1. Convert the myCA.pem to myCA.pfx by doing:

    openssl pkcs12 -export -out myCA.pfx -inkey myCA.key -in myCA.pem
    
  2. Import the myCA.pfx into the Trusted Certificate Authorities of Windows by opening (double-click) the myCA.pfx file, selecting "Local Machine" and Next, Next again, enter the password and then Next, and select "Place all certificates int he following store:" and click on Browse and choose "Trusted Root Certification Authorities" and Next, and then Finish.

Now your CA certificate is trusted by Windows. When you import and use the $NAME certificate it will be automatically trusted by Windows and Chrome.

38
  • 8
    @maverick browsers and operating systems ship with a limited number of CA's that they trust. Although anyone can become a CA, to get anyone to trust their certificates, they'd need people to manually add them as a trusted CA (as we tell Chrome to do when we manually import a certificate).
    – Jellicle
    Mar 17, 2020 at 22:33
  • 9
    Great! Two remarks for Mac users like me: On the last line, use -days 825 instead of -days 1825 due to superuser.com/questions/1492643/…, and it's worth noting that to import the root cert into Key Chain Access, you need not only to "File > Import file", but then also to find it in the list, right click it, expand "> Trust", and select "Always". Mar 23, 2020 at 16:23
  • 9
    if you need a PEM file instead of a CRT file for your local dev server don't worry, just combine .crt and .csr files and save them as a .pem file, and you are good to go. Mar 23, 2020 at 22:58
  • 8
    AT LAST IT WORKS! BRAVO for this answer. Please don't forget to load myCA.pem to your Chrome or Firefox (Settings > Manage certificates > Authorities > Import) Mar 28, 2020 at 0:37
  • 11
    In Chrome/ium on Windows when you try to import the certificate, pem is not listed in the available file extensions, but it can still import it (just select all files filter).
    – 8ctopus
    Jun 19, 2020 at 9:42
278

Click anywhere on the page and type a BYPASS_SEQUENCE:

BYPASS_SEQUENCE Chrome Version
thisisunsafe 65 - ?
badidea 62 - 64
danger ? - 61

You don't need to look for an input field; just type it. It feels strange but it works. I tried it on Mac High Sierra.

To double check if they changed it again, go to the latest Chromium source code. At the moment the BYPASS_SEQUENCE looks like this:

var BYPASS_SEQUENCE = window.atob('dGhpc2lzdW5zYWZl');

Now they have it camouflaged, but to see the real BYPASS_SEQUENCE you can run following line in a browser console.

console.log(window.atob('dGhpc2lzdW5zYWZl'));

OR

As an alternative to typing the phrase, you can paste this code snippet into the console.

sendCommand(SecurityInterstitialCommandId.CMD_PROCEED)
9
  • 25
    I was so skeptical this would actually work, it felt like entering cheat codes into a game. But lo and behold, thisisunsafe really does work for Chrome 86. Oct 25, 2020 at 21:11
  • 4
    If you see the "this certificate is invalid" page simply type in the letters and the window should reload and display the content of the page. (I'm also on Chrome 91 and for me it still works.)
    – KarlKode
    Jul 17, 2021 at 9:04
  • 1
    The problem is that the button does not appear on localhost.
    – KarlKode
    Jul 23, 2021 at 13:16
  • 5
    instead of typing phrase you can paste the part of code in console sendCommand(SecurityInterstitialCommandId.CMD_PROCEED)
    – Gedweb
    Aug 26, 2021 at 11:27
  • 2
    This still works on Chrome version 100, April 2022.
    – Paul
    Apr 26, 2022 at 15:12
194

Update for Chrome 58+ (Released 2017-04-19)

As of Chrome 58, the ability to identify the host using only commonName was removed. Certificates must now use subjectAltName to identify their host(s). See further discussion here and bug tracker here. In the past, subjectAltName was used only for multi-host certs so some internal CA tools don't include them.

If your self-signed certs worked fine in the past but suddenly started generating errors in Chrome 58, this is why.

So whatever method you are using to generate your self-signed cert (or cert signed by a self-signed CA), ensure that the server's cert contains a subjectAltName with the proper DNS and/or IP entry/entries, even if it's just for a single host.

For openssl, this means your OpenSSL config (/etc/ssl/openssl.cnf on Ubuntu) should have something similar to the following for a single host:

[v3_ca]   # and/or [v3_req], if you are generating a CSR
subjectAltName = DNS:example.com

or for multiple hosts:

[v3_ca]   # and/or [v3_req], if you are generating a CSR
subjectAltName = DNS:example.com, DNS:host1.example.com, DNS:*.host2.example.com, IP:10.1.2.3

In Chrome's cert viewer (which has moved to "Security" tab under F12) you should see it listed under Extensions as Certificate Subject Alternative Name:

Chrome cert viewer

2
  • Hi, I added Subject Alternative name but, imported to My store and the CA authority is in the trusted store, rebooted Chrome but still it is saying SAN is missing
    – eliassal
    Feb 18, 2021 at 16:43
  • The v3_req option worked for me in getting the subjectAltName in the CSR. However, when generating the cert using my self-signed CA it was ignored. (Using LibreSSL 2.6.5) As shown in the OpenSSL cookbook (see "Creating Certificates Valid for Multiple Hostnames"), what I needed for the latter was create a myserver.ext text file containing subjectAltName = DNS:localhost . And then I ran openssl x509 -req ... -extfile myserver.ext . I could confirm SAN added via "openssl x509 -text -in myserver.crt -noout"
    – Glen Mazza
    May 22, 2021 at 17:48
154

On the Mac, you can use the Keychain Access utility to add the self-signed certificate to the System keychain, and Chrome will then accept it. I found the step-by-step instructions here:

Google Chrome, Mac OS X and Self-Signed SSL Certificates

Basically:

  1. double-click the lock icon with an X and drag-and-drop the certificate icon to the desktop,
  2. open this file (ending with a .cer extension); this opens the keychain application which allows you to approve the certificate.
1
  • 3
    After you open the cert in the keychain app, edit the trust settings and set SSL to "Always Trust" Jan 11, 2021 at 22:22
135

On the Mac, you can create a certificate that's fully trusted by Chrome and Safari at the system level by doing the following:

# create a root authority cert
./create_root_cert_and_key.sh

# create a wildcard cert for mysite.com
./create_certificate_for_domain.sh mysite.com

# or create a cert for www.mysite.com, no wildcards
./create_certificate_for_domain.sh www.mysite.com www.mysite.com

The above uses the following scripts, and a supporting file v3.ext, to avoid subject alternative name missing errors

If you want to create a new self signed cert that's fully trusted using your own root authority, you can do it using these scripts.

create_root_cert_and_key.sh

#!/usr/bin/env bash
openssl genrsa -out rootCA.key 2048
openssl req -x509 -new -nodes -key rootCA.key -sha256 -days 1024 -out rootCA.pem

create_certificate_for_domain.sh

#!/usr/bin/env bash

if [ -z "$1" ]
then
  echo "Please supply a subdomain to create a certificate for";
  echo "e.g. www.mysite.com"
  exit;
fi

if [ ! -f rootCA.pem ]; then
  echo 'Please run "create_root_cert_and_key.sh" first, and try again!'
  exit;
fi
if [ ! -f v3.ext ]; then
  echo 'Please download the "v3.ext" file and try again!'
  exit;
fi

# Create a new private key if one doesnt exist, or use the xeisting one if it does
if [ -f device.key ]; then
  KEY_OPT="-key"
else
  KEY_OPT="-keyout"
fi

DOMAIN=$1
COMMON_NAME=${2:-*.$1}
SUBJECT="/C=CA/ST=None/L=NB/O=None/CN=$COMMON_NAME"
NUM_OF_DAYS=825
openssl req -new -newkey rsa:2048 -sha256 -nodes $KEY_OPT device.key -subj "$SUBJECT" -out device.csr
cat v3.ext | sed s/%%DOMAIN%%/"$COMMON_NAME"/g > /tmp/__v3.ext
openssl x509 -req -in device.csr -CA rootCA.pem -CAkey rootCA.key -CAcreateserial -out device.crt -days $NUM_OF_DAYS -sha256 -extfile /tmp/__v3.ext 

# move output files to final filenames
mv device.csr "$DOMAIN.csr"
cp device.crt "$DOMAIN.crt"

# remove temp file
rm -f device.crt;

echo 
echo "###########################################################################"
echo Done! 
echo "###########################################################################"
echo "To use these files on your server, simply copy both $DOMAIN.csr and"
echo "device.key to your webserver, and use like so (if Apache, for example)"
echo 
echo "    SSLCertificateFile    /path_to_your_files/$DOMAIN.crt"
echo "    SSLCertificateKeyFile /path_to_your_files/device.key"

v3.ext

authorityKeyIdentifier=keyid,issuer
basicConstraints=CA:FALSE
keyUsage = digitalSignature, nonRepudiation, keyEncipherment, dataEncipherment
subjectAltName = @alt_names
    
[alt_names]
DNS.1 = %%DOMAIN%%

One more step - How to make the self signed certs fully trusted in Chrome/Safari

To allow the self signed certificates to be FULLY trusted in Chrome and Safari, you need to import a new certificate authority into your Mac. To do so follow these instructions, or the more detailed instructions on this general process on the mitmproxy website:

You can do this one of 2 ways, at the command line, using this command which will prompt you for your password:

$ sudo security add-trusted-cert -d -r trustRoot -k /Library/Keychains/System.keychain rootCA.pem

or by using the Keychain Access app:

  1. Open Keychain Access
  2. Choose "System" in the "Keychains" list
  3. Choose "Certificates" in the "Category" list
  4. Choose "File | Import Items..."
  5. Browse to the file created above, "rootCA.pem", select it, and click "Open"
  6. Select your newly imported certificate in the "Certificates" list.
  7. Click the "i" button, or right click on your certificate, and choose "Get Info"
  8. Expand the "Trust" option
  9. Change "When using this certificate" to "Always Trust"
  10. Close the dialog, and you'll be prompted for your password.
  11. Close and reopen any tabs that are using your target domain, and it'll be loaded securely!

and as a bonus, if you need java clients to trust the certificates, you can do so by importing your certs into the java keystore. Note this will remove the cert from the keystore if it already exists, as it needs to update it in case things change. It of course only does this for the certs being imported.

import_certs_in_current_folder_into_java_keystore.sh

KEYSTORE="$(/usr/libexec/java_home)/jre/lib/security/cacerts";

function running_as_root()
{
  if [ "$EUID" -ne 0 ]
    then echo "NO"
    exit
  fi

  echo "YES"
}

function import_certs_to_java_keystore
{
  for crt in *.crt; do 
    echo prepping $crt 
    keytool -delete -storepass changeit -alias alias__${crt} -keystore $KEYSTORE;
    keytool -import -file $crt -storepass changeit -noprompt --alias alias__${crt} -keystore $KEYSTORE
    echo 
  done
}

if [ "$(running_as_root)" == "YES" ]
then
  import_certs_to_java_keystore
else
  echo "This script needs to be run as root!"
fi
22
  • Got "Error opening Private Key rootCA.key" when running $ ./create_root_cert_and_key.sh. macOS 10.12.4 and OpenSSL 0.9.8zh 14 Jan 2016.
    – donut
    May 9, 2017 at 17:03
  • 1
    Running $ openssl genrsa -out rootCA.key 2048 before $ ./create_root_cert_and_key.sh fixes the "Error opening Private Key rootCA.key" error I ran into.
    – donut
    May 9, 2017 at 17:12
  • 2
    Figured it out the solution (in case anyone else hits this) was to change -key to -keyout... openssl req -new -newkey rsa:2048 -sha256 -nodes -keyout device.key -subj "$SUBJECT" -out device.csr
    – Lenny
    May 9, 2017 at 19:49
  • 5
    I'm still getting an error in Chrome on my machine when doing this for localhost: Certificate error There are issues with the site's certificate chain (net::ERR_CERT_COMMON_NAME_INVALID).
    – Greg Blass
    Nov 28, 2017 at 12:39
  • 1
    yeah the "One more step - How to make the self signed certs fully trusted in Chrome/Safari" step basically really means "How to make this cert trusted everywhere in your system, except java" - So if you want it to work in Java too, follow that part as well!
    – Brad Parks
    Jul 28, 2022 at 11:03
100

Linux

If you're using Linux, you can also follow this official wiki pages:

Basically:

  • click the lock icon with an X,
  • choose Certificate Information
  • go to Details tab
  • Click on Export... (save as a file)

Now, the following command will add the certificate (where YOUR_FILE is your exported file):

certutil -d sql:$HOME/.pki/nssdb -A -t "P,," -n YOUR_FILE -i YOUR_FILE

To list all your certificates, run the following command:

certutil -d sql:$HOME/.pki/nssdb -L

If it still doesn't work, you could be affected by this bug: Issue 55050: Ubuntu SSL error 8179

P.S. Please also make sure that you have libnss3-tools, before you can use above commands.

If you don't have, please install it by:

sudo apt-get install libnss3-tools # on Ubuntu
sudo yum install nss-tools # on Fedora, Red Hat, etc.

As a bonus, you can use the following handy scripts:

$ cat add_cert.sh
certutil -d sql:$HOME/.pki/nssdb -A -t "P,," -n $1 -i $1
$ cat list_cert.sh
certutil -d sql:$HOME/.pki/nssdb -L # add '-h all' to see all built-in certs
$ cat download_cert.sh
echo QUIT | openssl s_client -connect $1:443 | sed -ne '/BEGIN CERT/,/END CERT/p'

Usage:

add_cert.sh [FILE]
list_cert.sh
download_cert.sh [DOMAIN]

Troubleshooting

  • Run Chrome with --auto-ssl-client-auth parameter

    google-chrome --auto-ssl-client-auth

3
  • Excellent, I love your scripts. You don't need the QUIT though (there is no such HTTP command as QUIT anyway), and you don't need the sed either, the nss tools can filter out the cert between BEGIN and END CERT. So the download_cert.sh can be simply this: echo | openssl s_client -connect $1:443 Feb 20, 2015 at 11:03
  • I have tried the other options but only this one currently works in Chrome 4x for linux it refused to import to any store using built in tools.
    – Kendrick
    Mar 24, 2016 at 2:27
  • With Chrome on Ubuntu 20.04 I couldn't get this to work passing the "P,," but was eventually able to get it to work using CT,c,c
    – Joseph
    Oct 14, 2021 at 13:11
93

UPDATE 11/2017: This answer probably won't work for most newer versions of Chrome.

UPDATE 02/2016: Better Instructions for Mac Users Can be Found Here.

  1. On the site you want to add, right-click the red lock icon in the address bar:enter image description here

    1. Click the tab labeled Connection, then click Certificate Information

    2. Click the Details tab, the click the button Copy to File.... This will open the Certificate Export Wizard, click Next to get to the Export File Format screen.

    3. Choose DER encoded binary X.509 (.CER), click Next

    4. Click Browse... and save the file to your computer. Name it something descriptive. Click Next, then click Finish.

    5. Open Chrome settings, scroll to the bottom, and click Show advanced settings...

    6. Under HTTPS/SSL, click Manage certificates...

    7. Click the Trusted Root Certification Authorities tab, then click the Import... button. This opens the Certificate Import Wizard. Click Next to get to the File to Import screen.

    8. Click Browse... and select the certificate file you saved earlier, then click Next.

    9. Select Place all certificates in the following store. The selected store should be Trusted Root Certification Authorities. If it isn't, click Browse... and select it. Click Next and Finish

    10. Click Yes on the security warning.

    11. Restart Chrome.

10
  • 2
    @AJeneral Yeah, Chrome changed again. The instructions in this article worked for me recently.
    – kmgdev
    Jul 15, 2014 at 16:56
  • 2
    This option doesn't exist on Mac Chrome latest as of the date of this comment. Sep 23, 2015 at 21:44
  • 2
    @kgrote, Chrome does not have it's own certificate store. All it's doing is adding and removing the Windows one. As such, a better way is to simply use certmgr.msc to add and delete certs.
    – Pacerier
    Nov 6, 2015 at 10:25
  • 2
    Did work for me, thanks. Had to restart Chrome and most importantly my certificate had to expire before 2017. SHA-1 stuff.
    – ioan
    Aug 5, 2016 at 17:26
  • 2
    CHROME CHANGED YET AGAIN! Now the step "In the address bar, click the little lock with the X. This will bring up a small information screen." doesn't work. Sep 12, 2017 at 14:20
92

UPDATED Apr 23/2020

Recommended by the Chromium Team

https://www.chromium.org/Home/chromium-security/deprecating-powerful-features-on-insecure-origins#TOC-Testing-Powerful-Features

Quick Super-Easy Solution

There is a secret bypass phrase that can be typed into the error page to have Chrome proceed despite the security error: thisisunsafe (in earlier versions of Chrome, type badidea, and even earlier, danger). DO NOT USE THIS UNLESS YOU UNDERSTAND EXACTLY WHY YOU NEED IT!

Source:

https://chromium.googlesource.com/chromium/src/+/d8fc089b62cd4f8d907acff6fb3f5ff58f168697%5E%21/

(NOTE that window.atob('dGhpc2lzdW5zYWZl') resolves to thisisunsafe)

The latest version of the source is @ https://chromium.googlesource.com/chromium/src/+/refs/heads/master/components/security_interstitials/core/browser/resources/interstitial_large.js and the window.atob function can be executed in a JS console.

For background about why the Chrome team changed the bypass phrase (the first time):

https://bugs.chromium.org/p/chromium/issues/detail?id=581189

If all else fails (Solution #1)

For quick one-offs if the "Proceed Anyway" option is not available, nor the bypass phrase is working, this hack works well:

  1. Allow certificate errors from localhost by enabling this flag (note Chrome needs a restart after changing the flag value):

    chrome://flags/#allow-insecure-localhost

    (and vote-up answer https://stackoverflow.com/a/31900210/430128 by @Chris)

  2. If the site you want to connect to is localhost, you're done. Otherwise, setup a TCP tunnel to listen on port 8090 locally and connect to broken-remote-site.com on port 443, ensure you have socat installed and run something like this in a terminal window:

    socat tcp-listen:8090,reuseaddr,fork tcp:broken-remote-site.com:443

  3. Go to https://localhost:8090 in your browser.

If all else fails (Solution #2)

Similar to "If all else fails (Solution #1)", here we configure a proxy to our local service using ngrok. Because you can either access ngrok http tunnels via TLS (in which case it is terminated by ngrok with a valid certificate), or via a non-TLS endpoint, the browser will not complain about invalid certificates.

Download and install ngrok and then expose it via ngrok.io:

ngrok http https://localhost

ngrok will start up and provide you a host name which you can connect to, and all requests will be tunneled back to your local machine.

2
  • Anyone trying to use localhost with https for service workers, the first point of If-all-fails worked for me on chrome 60 ubuntu 14.04
    – formatkaka
    Aug 23, 2017 at 16:15
  • this will still treat the cert as invalid and make the password manage refuse to work
    – Ray Foss
    Feb 21, 2019 at 20:39
62

If you're on a mac and not seeing the export tab or how to get the certificate this worked for me:

  1. Click the lock before the https://
  2. Go to the "Connection" tab
  3. Click "Certificate Information"

    Now you should see this: Different information of course and yours should be marked as trusted yet (otherwise      you probably wouldn't be here)

  4. Drag that little certificate icon do your desktop (or anywhere).

  5. Double click the .cer file that was downloaded, this should import it into your keychain and open Keychain Access to your list of certificates.

    In some cases, this is enough and you can now refresh the page.

    Otherwise:

  6. Double click the newly added certificate.
  7. Under the trust drop down change the "When using this certificate" option to "Always Trust"

Now reload the page in question and it should be problem solved! Hope this helps.


Edit from Wolph

To make this a little easier you can use the following script (source):

  1. Save the following script as whitelist_ssl_certificate.ssh:

    #!/usr/bin/env bash -e
    
    SERVERNAME=$(echo "$1" | sed -E -e 's/https?:\/\///' -e 's/\/.*//')
    echo "$SERVERNAME"
    
    if [[ "$SERVERNAME" =~ .*\..* ]]; then
        echo "Adding certificate for $SERVERNAME"
        echo -n | openssl s_client -connect $SERVERNAME:443 | sed -ne '/-BEGIN CERTIFICATE-/,/-END CERTIFICATE-/p' | tee /tmp/$SERVERNAME.cert
        sudo security add-trusted-cert -d -r trustRoot -k "/Library/Keychains/System.keychain" /tmp/$SERVERNAME.cert
    else
        echo "Usage: $0 www.site.name"
        echo "http:// and such will be stripped automatically"
    fi
    
  2. Make the script executable (from the shell):

    chmod +x whitelist_ssl_certificate.ssh
    
  3. Run the script for the domain you want (simply copy/pasting the full url works):

    ./whitelist_ssl_certificate.ssh https://your_website/whatever
    
2
  • 1
    This approach worked for me on OS X Mavericks, there was no Export option available as described in the top answer above. Jun 23, 2014 at 17:59
  • Works great. The lock before https is still crossed out, but it's okay because there's no annoying popup anymore.
    – nalply
    Aug 25, 2014 at 10:17
39

For a test environment

You can use --ignore-certificate-errors as a command line parameter when launching chrome (Working on Version 28.0.1500.52 on Ubuntu).

This will cause it to ignore the errors and connect without warning. If you already have a version of chrome running, you will need to close this before relaunching from the command line or it will open a new window but ignore the parameters.

I configure Intellij to launch chrome this way when doing debugging, as the test servers never have valid certificates.

I wouldn't recommend normal browsing like this though, as certificate checks are an important security feature, but this may be helpful to some.

5
  • 5
    It worked for me in Windows 8! I just right clicked on chrome shortcut > Properties > Changed 'Target' field like this (note that '--ignore-certificate-errors' should be added after quote, and with space): "C:\Program Files (x86)\Google\Chrome\Application\chrome.exe" --ignore-certificate-errors
    – mikhail-t
    Jul 15, 2013 at 13:52
  • 1
    This does not answer the question, and its dangerous. The question was how to get Chrome to trust a self signed server certificate; not how to ignore warnings and errors.
    – jww
    Jan 13, 2015 at 23:30
  • 1
    This is the only solution that worked for me on Chrome (63.0.3239.108) with Windows 7 (64-bit). With regard to security I created special icon on desktop which I only launch when developing on a local virtual machine. Importing self-signed local certificates, tuning chrome://flags & HSTS domain did not help. Chrome should definitely keep that old good button "Add security exception" - it would save me 2 hours of struggling with useless settings.
    – lubosdz
    Jan 2, 2018 at 11:46
  • This tutorial worked like a charm! youtube.com/watch?v=qoS4bLmstlk Apr 6, 2020 at 23:23
  • On Windows you can press Ctrl + R to get the Run dialog, then type chrome --ignore-certificate-errors Nov 26, 2023 at 1:35
38

Filippo Valsorda wrote a cross-platform tool, mkcert, to do this for lots of trust stores. I presume he wrote it for the same reason that there are so many answers to this question: it is a pain to do the "right" thing for SubjectAltName certificates signed by a trusted root CA.

mkcert is included in the major package management systems for Windows, macOS, and several Linux flavors. It is also mentioned in the Chromium docs in Step 4 of Testing Powerful Features.

mkcert

mkcert is a simple tool for making locally-trusted development certificates. It requires no configuration.

$ mkcert -install
Created a new local CA at "/Users/filippo/Library/Application Support/mkcert" 💥
The local CA is now installed in the system trust store! ⚡️
The local CA is now installed in the Firefox trust store (requires browser restart)! 🦊
$ mkcert example.com "*.example.com" example.test localhost 127.0.0.1 ::1
Using the local CA at "/Users/filippo/Library/Application Support/mkcert" ✨

Created a new certificate valid for the following names 📜
 - "example.com"
 - "*.example.com"
 - "example.test"
 - "localhost"
 - "127.0.0.1"
 - "::1"

The certificate is at "./example.com+5.pem" and the key at "./example.com+5-key.pem" ✅
3
  • I could not get this to work, at least for my subdomains of the sslip.io service.
    – Ryan
    Jun 23, 2021 at 22:04
  • As of today on a brand new mac, I got this to work -- but oddly enough Chrome 100.0.48 was very finicky with the "Not Secure" message until I undid the allow-insecure-localhost flag and went into keychain and check "trust all" on the certificates.... I guess its "secure" now? Another workaround was dragging the certificate icons out of chrome on the desktop and reimporting them into keychain, re-trusting them. Apr 19, 2022 at 19:39
  • Works like a charm if you don't forget to trust the CA with mkcert -install
    – Monsignor
    Mar 12 at 7:48
34

WINDOWS JUN/2017 Windows Server 2012

I followed @Brad Parks answer. On Windows you should import rootCA.pem in Trusted Root Certificates Authorities store.

I did the following steps:

openssl genrsa -out rootCA.key 4096
openssl req -x509 -new -nodes -key rootCA.key -newkey rsa:4096 -sha256 -days 1024 -out rootCA.pem
openssl req -new -newkey rsa:4096 -sha256 -nodes -keyout device.key -out device.csr
openssl x509 -req -in device.csr -CA rootCA.pem -CAkey rootCA.key -CAcreateserial -out device.crt -days 2000 -sha256 -extfile v3.ext

Where v3.ext is:

authorityKeyIdentifier=keyid,issuer
basicConstraints=CA:FALSE
keyUsage = digitalSignature, nonRepudiation, keyEncipherment, dataEncipherment
subjectAltName = @alt_names

[alt_names]
DNS.1 = localhost
IP.1 = 192.168.0.2
IP.2 = 127.0.0.1

Then, in my case I have a self hosted web app, so I need to bind certificate with IP address and port, certificate should be on MY store with private key information, so I exported to pfx format.

openssl pkcs12 -export -out device.pfx -inkey device.key -in device.crt

With mmc console (File/Add or Remove Snap-ins/Certificates/Add/Computert Account/LocalComputer/OK) I imported pfx file in Personal store.

Later I used this command to bind certificate (you could also use HttpConfig tool):

netsh http add sslcert ipport=0.0.0.0:12345 certhash=b02de34cfe609bf14efd5c2b9be72a6cb6d6fe54 appid={BAD76723-BF4D-497F-A8FE-F0E28D3052F4}

certhash=Certificate Thumprint

appid=GUID (your choice)

First I tried to import the certificate "device.crt" on Trusted Root Certificates Authorities in different ways but I'm still getting same error:

enter image description here

But I realized that I should import certificate of root authority not certificate for domain. So I used mmc console (File/Add or Remove Snap-ins/Certificates/Add/Computert Account/LocalComputer/OK) I imported rootCA.pem in Trusted Root Certificates Authorities store.

enter image description here

Restart Chrome and et voilà it works.

With localhost:

enter image description here

Or with IP address:

enter image description here

The only thing I could not achieve is that, it has obsolete cipher (red square on picture). Help is appreciated on this point.

With makecert it is not possible add SAN information. With New-SelfSignedCertificate (Powershell) you could add SAN information, it also works.

2
  • 3
    Important: Run OpenSSL as administrator.
    – Jose A
    Oct 10, 2017 at 1:27
  • But how to run Trusted Cert Store app? This answer is not complete
    – GeneCode
    Mar 17, 2021 at 1:00
23

As someone has noted, you need to restart ALL of Chrome, not just the browser windows. The fastest way to do this is to open a tab to...

chrome://restart

1
  • Hey! Just wanted to point out that this is what fixed it for me. I was adding a custom CA to the trust store, it had always worked for me that way. I tried Firefox and worked flawlessly but not chrome. At the end it was because it seems you need to fully restart chrome as you mention. It might be that Chrome keeps using the same trust store as long as those background processes are still running. Jan 8, 2019 at 17:53
17
  1. Add the CA certificate in the trusted root CA Store.

  2. Go to chrome and enable this flag!

chrome://flags/#allow-insecure-localhost

At last, simply use the *.me domain or any valid domains like *.com and *.net and maintain them in the host file. For my local devs, I use *.me or *.com with a host file maintained as follows:

  1. Add to host. C:/windows/system32/drivers/etc/hosts

    127.0.0.1 nextwebapp.me

Note: If the browser is already opened when doing this, the error will keep on showing. So, please close the browser and start again. Better yet, go incognito or start a new session for immediate effect.

2
  • 1
    This seems to be the same as the top-voted answer. Dec 16, 2019 at 18:49
  • I've only added the domain names that are allowed in local development i.e. *.me sites to the host file in Windows. People add the certificate but sometimes the host just fails to verify the SSL verification even if the certificate is installed properly. In which case, we create a new session. I've only added those tips. I've gone through this rabbit hole too deep so I wanted to make sure someone knew what to do if it was needed.
    – Ariel
    Dec 17, 2019 at 7:26
15

Are you sure the address the site is being served up as is the same as the certificate? I had the same problems with Chrome and a self-signed cert, but in the end I found it was just incredibly picky about the validation of the domain name on the cert (as it should be).

Chrome doesn't have it's own cert store and uses Window's own. However Chrome provides no way to import certs into the store so you should add them via IE instead.

Installing Certificates in Google Chrome

Installing Certificates in Internet Explorer

Also take a look at this for a couple of different approaches to creating self-signed certs (I'm assuming you're using IIS as you haven't mentioned).

How to Create a Self Signed Certificate in IIS 7

4
  • The site in question is localhost, and the CN of the certificate is "localhost". Yes, I did install the certificate in Windows's certificate store. Both IE and Chrome complain about the certificate.
    – pjohansson
    Sep 28, 2011 at 9:34
  • Not sure if you're using IIS or Apache, but check the extra link I've just added on creating self-signed certs for IIS.
    – Ira Rainey
    Sep 28, 2011 at 9:51
  • Because of the incredibly picky about the validation of the domain name on the cert part: does someone knows more about that? I have a problem (it is 2019) on Android 9 with a root certificate, which is blamed as unsecure by Google Chrome. It is OK for FF and on desktop.
    – BairDev
    Jul 18, 2019 at 7:18
  • "Are you sure the address the site is being served up as is the same as the certificate?" - Good question, how can I tell? Jul 15, 2022 at 14:09
9

I went down the process of using what bjnord suggested which was: Google Chrome, Mac OS X and Self-Signed SSL Certificates

What is shown in the blog did not work.

However, one of the comments to the blog was gold:

sudo security add-trusted-cert -d -r trustRoot -k /Library/Keychains/System.keychain site.crt

You'll need to follow the blog on how to get the cert file, after that you can use the command above and should be good to go.

9

The GUI for managing SSL certs on Chromium on Linux did NOT work properly for me. However, their docs gave the right answer. The trick was to run the command below that imports the self-signed SSL cert. Just update the name of the <certificate-nickname> and certificate-filename.cer, then restart chromium/chrome.

From the Docs:

On Linux, Chromium uses the NSS Shared DB. If the built-in manager does not work for you then you can configure certificates with the NSS command line tools.

Get the tools

  • Debian/Ubuntu: sudo apt-get install libnss3-tools

  • Fedora: su -c "yum install nss-tools"

  • Gentoo: su -c "echo 'dev-libs/nss utils' >> /etc/portage/package.use && emerge dev-libs/nss" (You need to launch all commands below with the nss prefix, e.g., nsscertutil.) Opensuse: sudo zypper install mozilla-nss-tools

To trust a self-signed server certificate, we should use

certutil -d sql:$HOME/.pki/nssdb -A -t "P,," -n <certificate-nickname> -i certificate-filename.cer

List all certificates

certutil -d sql:$HOME/.pki/nssdb -L

The TRUSTARGS are three strings of zero or more alphabetic characters, separated by commas. They define how the certificate should be trusted for SSL, email, and object signing, and are explained in the certutil docs or Meena's blog post on trust flags.

Add a personal certificate and private key for SSL client authentication Use the command:

pk12util -d sql:$HOME/.pki/nssdb -i PKCS12_file.p12

to import a personal certificate and private key stored in a PKCS #12 file. The TRUSTARGS of the personal certificate will be set to “u,u,u”.

Delete a certificate certutil -d sql:$HOME/.pki/nssdb -D -n <certificate nickname>

Excerpt From: https://chromium.googlesource.com/chromium/src/+/HEAD/docs/linux_cert_management.md

9

For Fedora, Ubuntu, Linux, if you're getting example.com Not a Certification authority error when adding the certificate using the GUI to add a new root authority. If you want to trust a server self signed certificate, it cannot make mention of an invalid authority... even if that's itself. I've only managed to make it work by trusting my authority and using that authorities key to sign server certificates.

Here's the self signed CA certificate that it accepted. This is the only way that I found works to get around cert_authority_invalid, I tried for hours to get it to accept a self signed end point certificate, no cigar. The UI will accept self signed authorities, as long as it's declared CA:TRUE. After that, all certs signed by that key with the correct DN will be accepted by Chrome without needing to add them independently.

openssl req -new -x509 -extensions v3_req -days 8440 -config ca.conf -key rockstor.key -out rockstor.cert

[req]
distinguished_name=dn
req_extensions=v3_req
prompt = no

[v3_req]
basicConstraints=CA:TRUE,pathlen:0
keyUsage = keyEncipherment, dataEncipherment
extendedKeyUsage = serverAuth, clientAuth
subjectAltName=@alt_names

[alt_names]
DNS.1 = ca.tdpowerskills.com

[dn]
C = US
ST = LA
L = Alexandria
O = TDPS Certification Authority
OU = LEARNOPS
CN = ca.tdpowerskills.com

openssl req -new -x509 -extensions v3_req -days 8440 -config config.conf -key rockstor.key -out rockstor.cert

[req]
distinguished_name=dn
req_extensions=v3_req
prompt = no

[v3_req]
basicConstraints=CA:FALSE
keyUsage = keyEncipherment, dataEncipherment
extendedKeyUsage = serverAuth, clientAuth
subjectAltName=@alt_names
issuerAltName=DNS:ca.tdpowerskills.com

[alt_names]
DNS.1 = big.tdps.app

[dn]
C = US
ST = LA
L = Alexandria
O = TDPS Certification Authority
OU = LEARNOPS
CN = ca.tdpowerskills.com

If that doesn't work:

  • chrome://restart to actually restart

  • Try to get more details on the error using Firefox, it tends to explain errors better. While Chrome will say: ERR_CERTIFICATE_INVALID, Firefox will throw: MOZILLA_PKIX_ERROR_CA_CERT_USED_AS_END_ENTITY.

  • Remember that Chrome now requires Subject Alternate Name and nearly ignores CN.

For others:

  • certutil -d sql:$HOME/.pki/nssdb -A -t "P,," -n <nickname> -i <my.crt> for server certificates

  • certutil -d sql:$HOME/.pki/nssdb -A -t "C,," -n <nickname> -i <my.crt> for CAs

  • For Firefox, the UI adding an exception certificate does work and it will trust it once you do that.

  • Perhaps you have funky settings in /etc/pki/tls/openssl.cnf which get merged with your config.

  • perhaps you're not adding an extension to the config or command line, such as v3_req

  • Note, my method bypasses the need for a CSR by just signing the certificates with the authority key and adding details for the dev servers. CSRs allow more keys for actual security.

  • I tried everything, but Chrome requires an authority with basicconstraints CA:true set. And server certificates must all be singed by a valid Authority, even if that's just another certificate that the signed themselves with CA:true.

8

Allowing insecure localhost work fine via this method chrome://flags/#allow-insecure-localhost

Just that you need to create your development hostname to xxx.localhost.

8

To create a self signed certificate in Windows that Chrome v58 and later will trust, launch Powershell with elevated privileges and type:

New-SelfSignedCertificate -CertStoreLocation Cert:\LocalMachine\My -Subject "fruity.local" -DnsName "fruity.local", "*.fruity.local" -FriendlyName "FruityCert" -NotAfter (Get-Date).AddYears(10)
#notes: 
#    -subject "*.fruity.local" = Sets the string subject name to the wildcard *.fruity.local
#    -DnsName "fruity.local", "*.fruity.local"
#         ^ Sets the subject alternative name to fruity.local, *.fruity.local. (Required by Chrome v58 and later)
#    -NotAfter (Get-Date).AddYears(10) = make the certificate last 10 years. Note: only works from Windows Server 2016 / Windows 10 onwards!!

Once you do this, the certificate will be saved to the Local Computer certificates under the Personal\Certificates store.

You want to copy this certificate to the Trusted Root Certification Authorities\Certificates store.

One way to do this: click the Windows start button, and type certlm.msc. Then drag and drop the newly created certificate to the Trusted Root Certification Authorities\Certificates store per the below screenshot. enter image description here

3
  • @mpowrie. Having generated this, how do I link it the Apache webserver? On localhost server. Sep 25, 2019 at 13:33
  • Ifedi Okonkwo: I'm not sure with Apache webserver sorry, but with IIS you add a site binding of type https, include the fully qualified hostname, and select the SSL certificate.
    – mpowrie
    Sep 26, 2019 at 1:01
  • This works like a charm. I'll say you'll need to do one additional step if you want to assign that cert as a binding...and that the cert needs to be in the Personal > Certificates as well. Dragging and dropping, for some reason, actually removed it from the Personal certs and placed it in the Trusted Certs. So make sure you copy and paste it. Jan 5, 2020 at 22:28
7

This worked for me. See: http://www.robpeck.com/2010/10/google-chrome-mac-os-x-and-self-signed-ssl-certificates/#.Vcy8_ZNVhBc

In the address bar, click the little lock with the X. This will bring up a small information screen. Click the button that says "Certificate Information."

Click and drag the image to your desktop. It looks like a little certificate.

Double-click it. This will bring up the Keychain Access utility. Enter your password to unlock it.

Be sure you add the certificate to the System keychain, not the login keychain. Click "Always Trust," even though this doesn't seem to do anything.

After it has been added, double-click it. You may have to authenticate again.

Expand the "Trust" section.

"When using this certificate," set to "Always Trust"

1
  • This seems to work! You may need to restart your browser at the end.
    – alexw
    Sep 10, 2020 at 23:12
7

For Chrome on MacOS, if you have prepared a certificate:

  • Quit Chrome (cmd+Q).
  • Start the Keychain Access app and open the "Certificates" category.
  • Drag your certificate file onto the Keychain Access window and type the password for the certificate file.
  • Double click on your certificate and unfold the "Trust" list.
    • In row "When using this certificate," choose "Always Trust."
    • Close this stuff and type your password.
  • Start Chrome and clear all caches.
  • Check that everything is ok.
7
mkdir CA
openssl genrsa -aes256 -out CA/rootCA.key 4096
openssl req -x509 -new -nodes -key CA/rootCA.key -sha256 -days 1024 -out CA/rootCA.crt

openssl req -new -nodes -keyout example.com.key -out domain.csr -days 3650 -subj "/C=US/L=Some/O=Acme, Inc./CN=example.com"
openssl x509 -req -days 3650 -sha256 -in domain.csr -CA CA/rootCA.crt -CAkey CA/rootCA.key -CAcreateserial -out example.com.crt -extensions v3_ca -extfile <(
cat <<-EOF
[ v3_ca ]
subjectAltName = DNS:example.com
EOF
)
2
  • 1
    This is the only one that worked for me with chrome 77. Thank you for saving my day.
    – Romain
    Sep 29, 2019 at 10:40
  • 1
    How does one use the generated files? I understand how to use the domain .crt and .key files but what is the .csr file for? And how do I use the rootCA.* files? Please expand on your answer...
    – Chiwda
    Nov 3, 2019 at 8:49
7

As of March 2020, on MacOS Catalina using Chrome 81, this has changed once you create a valid certificate using openssl as outlined above.

First, I browsed to my site using Safari and clicked on the link at the bottom of the the warning page that allows me to Access the Site Anyway. This added the certificate to my Mac Keychain (ie Keychain.app). Safari then would let me view the page. Chrome showed that the certificate was trusted, but wouldn't let me view the page. I continued to get the CERTIFICATE_INVALID error.

In Keychain, select All Items in the pane on the bottom left. Then search for your localhost DNS name (ie myhost.example.com).

Double click on your certificate. It’ll open an edit dialog for your cert.

Change "When using this Certificate" to "Always Trust"

This was totally counterintuitive because SSL was already set to Always Trust, presumably by Safari when the cert was added. Chrome only started working once I changed it globally to Always Trust. When I changed it back, it stopped working.

0
7

June 2021 - Windows 10 - Chrome v91 (SIMPLE)

Follow the cert generation instructions from selfsignedcertificate.com:

Example domain name: mydomain.local, replace it with your domain name.

  1. To generate a key:

    openssl genrsa -out mydomain.local.key 2048
    
  2. Create the config file mydomain.local.conf with only the following content:

    [req]
    distinguished_name=req
    [SAN]
    subjectAltName=DNS:mydomain.local
    

    Note: In subcjectAltName you can define more domains (optional), like:

    subjectAltName=DNS:mydomain.local, DNS:*.mydomain.local, DNS:otherdomain.local, IP:192.168.1.10

  3. Create the certificate:

    openssl req -new -x509 -key mydomain.local.key -out mydomain.local.crt -days 3650 -subj /CN=mydomain.local -extensions SAN -config mydomain.local.conf
    
  4. Add the Cert to Trusted Root Certification Authorities

    • Right click the mydomain.local.crt file
    • Select Install Certificate from the context menu.
    • Choose Local Machine in the popup.
    • Choose Place all certificates in the following store.
    • Click Browse.
    • Choose Trusted Root Certification Authorities.
    • Click Ok, Next, Finish.
    • Restart Chrome.
1
  • 1
    This looked promising (and serverfault.com/a/1017093/119666 was helpful), but it didn't work for me. In Brave (which is basically Chrome), I still get: NET::ERR_CERT_AUTHORITY_INVALID Subject: sslip.io Issuer: sslip.io
    – Ryan
    Jun 23, 2021 at 21:21
6

When clicking the little crossed out lock icon next to the URL, you'll get a box looking like this:

enter image description here

After clicking the Certificate information link, you'll see the following dialog:

enter image description here

It tells you which certificate store is the correct one, it's the Trusted Root Certification Authorities store.

You can either use one of the methods outlined in the other answers to add the certificate to that store or use:

certutil -addstore -user "ROOT" cert.pem
  • ROOT is the internal name of the certificate store mentioned earlier.
  • cert.pem is the name of your self-signed certificate.
3
  • 1
    certutil -addstore -user "ROOT" cert.pem is Windows?
    – Pacerier
    Nov 6, 2015 at 10:48
  • 1
    @Pacerier: Correct, it's for Windows. Nov 6, 2015 at 10:50
  • You mave have it in Trusted Root Certification Authorities but still issue remains: imgur.com/a/mjlglVz imgur.com/a/n8BFH5S Windows 10, chrome 78
    – tryingHard
    Nov 13, 2019 at 13:30
6

Fix for Chrome on Windows.

First, you need to export the certificate.

  • Locate the url in the browser. “https” segment of the url will be crossed out with the red line and there will be a lock symbol to the left.
  • Right click on the crossed-out "https" segment.
  • You will see an information window with various information
  • Click “details”.
  • Export the certificate, follow directions accept default settings.

To import

  • Go to Chrome Settings
  • Click on "advanced settings"
  • Under HTTPS/SSL click to "Manage Certificates"
  • Go to "Trusted Root Certificate Authorities"
  • Click to "Import"
  • There will be a pop up window that will ask you if you want to install this certificate. Click "yes".
4
  • It says it can't find the private key.
    – Quip11
    Jan 5, 2019 at 14:41
  • 1
    You probably tried the import under the "Your certificates" tab, you need to use the one under the "Authorities" tab. Aug 28, 2019 at 12:45
  • I tried importing under all tabs, none of those worked even after restarting chrome
    – maximus
    Oct 25, 2019 at 16:24
  • 2
    It does not work for me, imgur.com/a/xoqXaHD Win 10, chrome 78 here.
    – tryingHard
    Nov 13, 2019 at 12:27
6

I was experiencing the same issue: I had installed the certificate in to Windows' Trusted Root Authorities store, and Chrome still refused the certificate, with the error ERR_CERT_COMMON_NAME_INVALID. Note that when the certificate is not properly installed in the store, the error is ERR_CERT_AUTHORITY_INVALID.

As hinted by the name of the error, this comment, and this question, the problem was lying in the declared domain name in the certificate. When prompted for the "Common Name" while generating the certificate, I had to enter the domain name I was using to access the site (localhost in my case). I restarted Chrome using chrome://restart and it was finally happy with this new certificate.

2

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