217

For example, running wget https://www.dropbox.com results in the following errors:

ERROR: The certificate of `www.dropbox.com' is not trusted.
ERROR: The certificate of `www.dropbox.com' hasn't got a known issuer.
0

15 Answers 15

293

If you don't care about checking the validity of the certificate just add the --no-check-certificate option on the wget command-line. This worked well for me.

NOTE: This opens you up to man-in-the-middle (MitM) attacks, and is not recommended for anything where you care about security.

0
148

Looking at current hacky solutions in here, I feel I have to describe a proper solution after all.

First, you need to install the cygwin package ca-certificates via Cygwin's setup.exe to get the certificates.

Do NOT use curl or similar hacks to download certificates (as a neighboring answer advices) because that's fundamentally insecure and may compromise the system.

Second, you need to tell wget where your certificates are, since it doesn't pick them up by default in Cygwin environment. If you can do that either with the command-line parameter --ca-directory=/usr/ssl/certs (best for shell scripts) or by adding ca_directory = /usr/ssl/certs to ~/.wgetrc file.

You can also fix that by running ln -sT /usr/ssl /etc/ssl as pointed out in another answer, but that will work only if you have administrative access to the system. Other solutions I described do not require that.

4
  • 5
    Thanks for this answer, and especially for the reminder about the ~/.wgetrc file. As a MacPorts user, my certs are located at /opt/local/etc/openssl, a fact which I hope someone finds handy. Commented Apr 9, 2015 at 19:22
  • 3
    And for fink, they're in /sw/etc/ssl/certs/ca-bundle.crt which comes as part of the ca-bundle package -- as described here.
    – jhfrontz
    Commented Oct 22, 2015 at 22:15
  • Not sure if it's a typo but ln -s /etc/ssl /usr/ssl worked for me.
    – zkent
    Commented Nov 10, 2019 at 2:22
  • I installed and used the command again, the terminal said I had the newer version and still doesn't trusted github, I'll run with --no-check-certificate.
    – Danielr
    Commented Sep 23, 2021 at 22:19
124

If the problem is that a known root CA is missing and when you are using ubuntu or debian, then you can solve the problem with this one line:

sudo apt-get install ca-certificates
5
  • 3
    apt-get is on cygwin ? apt-get is on redgat ? ;) Commented Jun 2, 2014 at 12:30
  • 9
    ca-certificates was already installed in my computer. Running update-ca-certificates solved the problem.
    – Tomás Fox
    Commented Feb 19, 2015 at 2:10
  • This worked also on my Synology DS215j with Debian chroot.
    – microspino
    Commented Dec 18, 2015 at 16:11
  • 1
    @fox update-ca-certificates is a ubuntu command, not available in debian.
    – Devy
    Commented Aug 22, 2016 at 16:21
  • @Devy It actually worked on my raspberry pi running debian wheezy Commented Sep 5, 2017 at 12:32
33

May be this will help:

wget --no-check-certificate https://blah-blah.tld/path/filename
3
  • 2
    One more: This situation also possible if you are using Kaspersky AntiVirus or same soft (by default it's replacing normal verified SSL certificate of site to their own) - so, you can disable checking SSL traffic in Antivirus soft. Commented Jun 10, 2018 at 16:22
  • Warning: with this solution, you will be susceptible to the man-in-middle attack
    – nav
    Commented Feb 3, 2021 at 16:40
  • 3
    This does NOT fix the issue !!
    – yokodev
    Commented Mar 16, 2021 at 1:41
12

First, the SSL certificates need to be installed. Instructions (based on https://stackoverflow.com/a/4454754/278488):

pushd /usr/ssl/certs
curl http://curl.haxx.se/ca/cacert.pem | awk 'split_after==1{n++;split_after=0} /-----END CERTIFICATE-----/ {split_after=1} {print > "cert" n ".pem"}'
c_rehash

The above is enough to fix curl, but wget requires an extra symlink:

ln -sT /usr/ssl /etc/ssl
5
  • 6
    Is this not insecure to install root certificate authorities from a random web site, especially with haxx in the name?
    – Chloe
    Commented Jun 29, 2012 at 2:04
  • 6
    @Chloe curl.haxx.se that is the dev site of cURL. Pretty trustworthy folks.
    – ylluminate
    Commented Jul 18, 2012 at 17:39
  • how do you fix it without curl? Commented Sep 19, 2012 at 20:41
  • 1
    omfg the symlink was what I missed... searched 30min for a 1 liner fix ><
    – Populus
    Commented Sep 22, 2012 at 19:29
  • 4
    This is hacky on several levels. First, you don't need to download the certificates manually because there's a Cygwin package for that called "ca-certificates". Second, symlinking will only work if you have administrative access to the system or you've installed cygwin for your user account only, which is not always the case, so the code is not reliable.
    – Shnatsel
    Commented Mar 6, 2013 at 16:08
6

I have the similar problem and fixed it by temporarily disabling my antivirus(Kaspersky Free 18.0.0.405). This AV has HTTPS interception module that automatically self-sign all certificates it finds in HTTPS responses.

Wget from Cygwin does not know anything about AV root certificate, so when it finds that website's certificate was signed with non trust certificate it prints that error.

To fix this permanently without disabling AV you should copy the AV root certificate from Windows certificate store to /etc/pki/ca-trust/source/anchors as .pem file(base64 encoding) and run update-ca-trust

1
5
apt-get install ca-certificates 

The s makes the difference ;)

2
  • There is no apt-get in cygwin, so this doesn't work.
    – jlh
    Commented Apr 17, 2018 at 9:37
  • @jlh Install apt-cyg and then you should be able to run tons of useful commands for installing packages. The above command translates to: $ apt-cyg install ca-certificates
    – alphaGeek
    Commented Aug 11, 2021 at 11:02
3

In my case, on raspberry pi 3B the timing was in the future (2025) that I need to update to the current local time using ntpdate by passing the time to the past and it solved the issue.

 $ sudo date +%Y%m%d -s "20210101"
 $ sudo ntpdate times1.mike.fi
1

Thanks to Denis Bakharev I've solved that case.

If someone has Cygwin wget not working because 'certificate not trusted' and having ca-certificates installed AND having Antivirus that automatically self-sign all certificates it finds in HTTPS responses then you need:

  1. Get root certificate from your AV (I got mine with browser: open any https web-site, check it's certificate, go to Certification Path tab, click on Root certificate. Then click View certificate button, go to Details tab and click Copy to File... button. Default settings are fine for saving certificate in *.cer file).
  2. Convert *.cer to *.crt. You can use Cygwin's OpenSSL with the following command:

openssl x509 -inform DER -in <your *.cer certificate file> -out <new cert>.crt

  1. Move new *.crt file to ca-directory (in my case it was /etc/pki/tls/certs/).

That was enough for me to get wget working.

0

I had a similar problem with wget to my own live web site returning errors after installing a new SSL certificate. I'd already checked several browsers and they didn't report any errors:

wget --no-cache -O - "https://example.com/..." ERROR: The certificate of ‘example.com’ is not trusted. ERROR: The certificate of ‘example.com’ hasn't got a known issuer.

The problem was I had installed the wrong certificate authority .pem/.crt file from the issuer. Usually they bundle the SSL certificate and CA file as a zip file, but DigiCert email you the certificate and you have to figure out the matching CA on your own. https://www.digicert.com/help/ has an SSL certificate checker which lists the SSL authority and the hopefully matching CA with a nice blue link graphic if they agree:

`SSL Cert: Issuer GeoTrust TLS DV RSA Mixed SHA256 2020 CA-1

CA: Subject GeoTrust TLS DV RSA Mixed SHA256 2020 CA-1 Valid from 16/Jul/2020 to 31/May/2023 Issuer DigiCert Global Root CA`

0

We just had this same issue come up when we installed a newly minted certificate just this last week. I've also seen it two other times...yet I'm slow to learn. In all 3 cases I had to get the "intermediate certificates" and install them. In other words My cert was good but it's signer or it's signer's signer wasn't correctly installed. Make sure you go to your certificate provider's site and get the correct intermediate certificates and install them as well on your server and then this warning will go away.

It might not JUST be the above, it could also be that clients don't have updated lists...but I would make sure it's not just you not fully installing the certificates right FIRST, and then after that going on to the clients and making sure their list is updated.

0

Not exactly the same issue. On docker, I was mounting my host filesystem to /etc where OpenSSL certs were already installed which gets overwritten.

Changing the mounting to different filesystem fixed it.

0

In my case, it was happening because I was using an outdated base image. So, I changed it from java:8 to the official openjdk:8 image and I didn't get the error anymore on wget. So, you may need to change your base image or os which isn't outdated and wget should work. I think, the root cause is this: DST Root CA X3 Expiration (September 2021)

-6

If you are using windows just go to control panel, click on automatic updates then click on Windows Update Web Site link. Just follow the step. At least this works for me, no more certificates issue i.e whenever I go to https://www.dropbox.com as before.

1
  • This isn't related to Cygwin
    – Synthead
    Commented Mar 8, 2016 at 20:22
-6

Just do

apt-get install ca-certificate

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.