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I was reading tutorial at

https://learn.microsoft.com/ja-jp/aspnet/core/tutorials/razor-pages/razor-pages-start?view=aspnetcore-2.2&tabs=visual-studio-code

and ran this command:

dotnet dev-certs https --trust

I expect https://localhost should be trusted. but I found the error message;

$ Specify --help for a list of available options and commands.

It seems that the command "dotnet dev-certs https" has no --trust options. How to resolve this problem?

That link you've provided to the reading tutorial seems to lead to a page in Japanese. Surely a great read but the language barrier might be an issue. – Konrad Viltersten Jul 4, 2021 at 9:35
  • dotnet dev-certs https -v to generate a self-signed cert
  • convert the generated cert in ~/.dotnet/corefx/cryptography/x509stores/my from pfx to pem using openssl pkcs12 -in <certname>.pfx -nokeys -out localhost.crt -nodes
  • copy localhost.crt to /usr/local/share/ca-certificates
  • trust the certificate using sudo update-ca-certificates
  • verify if the cert is copied to /etc/ssl/certs/localhost.pem (extension changes)
  • verify if it's trusted using openssl verify localhost.crt
  • Unfortunately this does not work:

  • dotnet dev-certs https generates certificates that are affected by the issue described on https://github.com/openssl/openssl/issues/1418 and https://github.com/dotnet/aspnetcore/issues/7246:
  • $ openssl verify localhost.crt
    CN = localhost
    error 20 at 0 depth lookup: unable to get local issuer certificate
    error localhost.crt: verification failed
    
  • due to that it's impossible to have a dotnet client trust the certificate
  • Workaround: (tested on Openssl 1.1.1c)

  • manually generate self-signed cert
  • trust this cert
  • force your application to use this cert
  • In detail:

  • manually generate self-signed cert:

  • create localhost.conf file with the following content:
  • [req]
    default_bits       = 2048
    default_keyfile    = localhost.key
    distinguished_name = req_distinguished_name
    req_extensions     = req_ext
    x509_extensions    = v3_ca
    [req_distinguished_name]
    commonName                  = Common Name (e.g. server FQDN or YOUR name)
    commonName_default          = localhost
    commonName_max              = 64
    [req_ext]
    subjectAltName = @alt_names
    [v3_ca]
    subjectAltName = @alt_names
    basicConstraints = critical, CA:false
    keyUsage = keyCertSign, cRLSign, digitalSignature,keyEncipherment
    [alt_names]
    DNS.1   = localhost
    DNS.2   = 127.0.0.1
    
  • generate cert using openssl req -x509 -nodes -days 365 -newkey rsa:2048 -keyout localhost.key -out localhost.crt -config localhost.conf
  • convert cert to pfx using openssl pkcs12 -export -out localhost.pfx -inkey localhost.key -in localhost.crt
  • (optionally) verify cert using openssl verify -CAfile localhost.crt localhost.crt which should yield localhost.crt: OK
  • as it's not trusted yet using openssl verify localhost.crt should fail with
  • CN = localhost
    error 18 at 0 depth lookup: self signed certificate
    error localhost.crt: verification failed
    
  • trust this cert:

  • copy localhost.crt to /usr/local/share/ca-certificates
  • trust the certificate using sudo update-ca-certificates
  • verify if the cert is copied to /etc/ssl/certs/localhost.pem (extension changes)
  • verifying the cert without the CAfile option should work now
  • $ openssl verify localhost.crt 
    localhost.crt: OK
    
  • force your application to use this cert

  • update your appsettings.json with the following settings:
  • "Kestrel": {
      "Certificates": {
        "Default": {
          "Path": "localhost.pfx",
          "Password": ""
                    Incredibly helpful, thank you. The only caveat for me was that this does not work with openssl 1.0.1, I had to update to 1.1.1 to succeed. Also worth mentioning this issue: github.com/dotnet/aspnetcore/issues/7246 which talks through this in detail.
    – Michael Armitage
                    Jan 16, 2020 at 10:49
                    Thanks. As I am using Ubuntu on WSL I also installed the .pfx file on Windows Certificate Store: "Trusted Root Certification Authorities".
    – Juan Rojas
                    May 4, 2020 at 4:03
                    Following the steps i'm getting: ▶ ls -la /etc/ssl/certs/localhost.pem | grep localhost   lrwxrwxrwx 1 root root 46 Oct 18 04:19 /etc/ssl/certs/localhost.pem -> /usr/local/share/ca-certificates/localhost.crt  Repositories/dotnet/TodoApi                                                                                                                                                                 ▶ openssl verify localhost.crt CN = ubuntu-machine error 18 at 0 depth lookup: self signed certificate error localhost.crt:
    – Snewedon
                    Oct 18, 2020 at 3:21
                    @Snewedon sorry to hear it didn't work. I followed exactly the same steps and it did work for me. Hard to debug based on the limited information available. Maybe different openssl version? Needs v1.1.1 or higher.
    – chrisvdb
                    Oct 18, 2020 at 16:00
    

    While the answer provided by @chrsvdb is helpful it does not solve all problems. I still had issue with service-to-service communication (HttpClient - PartialChain error) and also you must reconfigure Kestrel to use your own certificate. It is possible to create a self-signed certificate and import it to the .NET SDK. All you need is to specify the 1.3.6.1.4.1.311.84.1.1 extension in the certificate.

    After that the cert can be imported into .NET Core SDK and trusted. Trusting in Linux is a bit hard as each application can have it's own certificate store. E.g. Chromium and Edge use nssdb which can be configured with certutil as described John Duffy. Unfortunately the location to the nssdb maybe different when you install application as snap. Then each application has its own database. E.g. for Chromium Snap the path will be $HOME/snap/chromium/current/.pki/nssdb, for Postman Snap the will be $HOME/snap/postman/current/.pki/nssdb and so on.

    Therefor I have created a script which generates the cert, trusts it for Postman Snap, Chmromium Snap, current user nssdb and on system level. It also imports the script into the .NET SDK so it will be used by ASP.NET Core without changing the configuration. You can find more informations about the script in my blog post https://blog.wille-zone.de/post/aspnetcore-devcert-for-ubuntu

    this is the answer!!! Great tool, spent a whole afternoon trying to make a simple blazor app work without success. After all that time I came across this super script, wonderful, worked like a charm and only took 10 seconds. – Rui Lima May 12, 2021 at 18:31

    In adition to crisvdb answer, I've several information to add and is the continuation of the walktrough. I don't comment because is pretty complex comment this, but before this answer take a look to crisvdb answer first and then return to continue.

    Take the "in detail" crisdb answer.

  • You can make your cert in any folder, can be or can't be in the same folder of the app.
  • Take openssl verify -CAfile localhost.crt localhost.crt as not optional step, mandatory. It will help.
  • Do not recompile or touch the code meanwhile you are doing this, in order to get first scenario clean.
  • If you run sudo update-ca-certificates that will answer you in wich folder the certified should be copied.
  • In some distributions, as Raspbian for Raspberry Pi, CA certificates are located in /etc/ssl/certs as well as /usr/share/ca-certificates/ and in some cases /usr/local/share/certificates.
  • Do not copy the cert manually to trusted certs, run sudo update-ca-certificates after you copy the cert in the right folder. If it doesn't work (doesn't update or add any certificate) copy it to every folder possible.
  • If you use a password while making the certificate, you should use it in the appsettings.json
  • If you get this error:
  • Interop+Crypto+OpenSslCryptographicException: error:2006D002:BIO routines:BIO_new_file:system lib

    Take in consideration that error means "access denied". It can be because you don't have permissions or related.

    7b) Could be also that the file is not found, I use the entire path in the config:

     "Path": "/home/user/www/myfolder1/myapp/localhost.pfx",
    
  • After that, and if everything works, you could see a 500 error if you are using Apache or Apache2.
  • If you get the following error in the apache logs of the site:

    [ssl:error] [remote ::1:yourport] AH01961: SSL Proxy requested for yoursite.com:443 but not enabled [Hint: SSLProxyEngine] [proxy:error] AH00961: HTTPS: failed to enable ssl support for [::1]:yourport (localhost)

    you must set in the VirtualHost the following configuration after SSLEngine On and before your ProxyPass

    SSLProxyEngine on
    
  • After that, and if everything works, you could see a 500 error if you are using Apache or Apache2.
  • If you get the following error in the apache logs of the site:

    [proxy:error] [client x.x.x.x:port] AH00898: Error during SSL Handshake with remote server returned by / [proxy_http:error] [client x.x.x.x:port] AH01097: pass request body failed to [::1]:port (localhost) from x.x.x.x()

    you must set in the VirtualHost the following configuration after SSLProxyEngine on and before your ProxyPass

    SSLProxyVerify none
    SSLProxyCheckPeerCN off
    SSLProxyCheckPeerName off
    

    UPDATE

    If you are renovating this, and using the same names, take in consideration that you should remove your pem file from etc/ssl/certs

    UPDATE 2
    If it returns:

    Unhandled exception. Interop+Crypto+OpenSslCryptographicException: error:2006D002:BIO routines:BIO_new_file:system lib

    Check that your pfx file is on 755 permissions.

    If appsettings.json seems to be don't load (on port 5000 by default or SQL or any configuration doesn't load or can't be read), take in consideration that the dotnet must be executed on the same directory where is appsettings.json

    Looks like this is a known issue with dotnet global tools and that specific command is only available for MacOS and Windows. See this issue on github: Issue 6066.

    It seems like there may be a work around for Linux users based on this SO post: ASP.Net Core application service only listening to Port 5000 on Ubuntu.

    It looks like the following could help to trust the dotnet dev certs: https://blog.wille-zone.de/post/aspnetcore-devcert-for-ubuntu/

    Then you will see also in the browser that certificate is OK and valid for the next yeat.

    Give it a try... Good luck!