Related
I know this has been asked on SO before but I think my situation is a little bit different:
When I'm trying to use curl inside PHP I receive the following error when trying to interact with apples push notification service (https://api.push.apple.com/3/device/)
Curl failed: NSS: client certificate not found (nickname not specified)
This is due to the fact that on centos, php is build with curl that uses NSS instead OpenSSL.
What I tried so far:
Recompiling curl (worked! Binary is able to perform the call, but php is not)
Recompiling php (didnt work, as it requires curl-devel to be installed, which might link to NSS again)
So my next approach is to fix this NSS problem, but it turns out NSS is a very bad piece of software as just a simple rename of an imported lets-ecnrypt certificate doesnt work.. ..
Could someone please explain me how I could fix this? I already tried importing a lets encrypt certificate into the NSS database stored in /etc/pki/nssdb, that worked - but unfortunately the certificate is not recognized in PHP, even if I provide its nickname in CURLOPT_SSLCERT => 'nickname'.
Maybe this is because it has special characters inside its nickname which i cannot change as NSS fails to rename (lol).
When I directly try to provide certificates in php using
CURLOPT_SSLCERT => $certFile,
CURLOPT_SSLKEY => $keyFile,
CURLOPT_CAINFO => $caCertFile
I get:
Curl failed: Peer's Certificate issuer is not recognized.
I also turned of peer verification by
CURLOPT_SSL_VERIFYPEER => FALSE
ending in
Curl failed: security library failure
Is there anybody out there who could teach me how to fix it or how to build php on centos with builting curl using openssl?
BR,
Finally I got this working, here is what I did:
Recompiled curl with openssl and put the libcurl.so.4 in a new folder /home/mylibs/
Copied all libs from /usr/lib to /home/mylibs/ while not replacing my libcurl.so.4
Located the system's php-cgi binary, renamed it to php-cgi-real
Created a blank file php-cgi
#! /bin/bash
export LD_PRELOAD=/home/mylibs/libcurl.so.4
exec php-cgi-real "$#"
Restarted the service
Done!
Since last night, several of my scripts (on different servers) using file_get_contents("https://...") and curl functions stopped working.
Example request that fails:
file_get_contents("https://domain.tld/script.php");
Error:
PHP Warning: file_get_contents(): SSL operation failed with code 1. OpenSSL Error messages:
error:1416F086:SSL routines:tls_process_server_certificate:certificate verify failed in /home/domain/public_html/script.php on line 19
I already "fixed" the problem using:
$arrContextOptions=array(
"ssl"=>array(
"verify_peer"=>false,
"verify_peer_name"=>false,
),
);
file_get_contents("https://domain.tld/path/script.php", false, stream_context_create($arrContextOptions));
The "fix" is far from ideal since I'm not verifying the authenticity of the connection, but until I understand the origin of the problem and how to prevent it from happening again, I'll be forced to use it.
Notes:
PHP scripts with Curl also stopped working and the fix is similar:
curl_setopt($ch, CURLOPT_SSL_VERIFYHOST, 0); curl_setopt($ch, CURLOPT_SSL_VERIFYPEER, 0);;
The SSL certificate is issued by Let's Encrypt and it was renewed last night ("not valid before 2020/12/24");
All servers have the same timezone;
I'm using CentOS 7/Ubuntu 18 and Virtualmin;
If I open "https://domain.tld/script.php" on Firefox/Chrome, no SSL warnings are shown and the certificate is valid;
I've tried to update the CA certificates (yum install ca-certificates.noarch), but the latest version is already installed;
I understand what's wrong, what I cannot figure out is why it started happening and how to fix it (the real fix).
Question:
How to fix and prevent it from happening again?
The problem was an outdated CA certificate and I found the solution on a Let's Encrypt community thread :
Manual Solution:
Replace the contents of /home/[domain]/ssl.ca with lets-encrypt-r3-cross-signed.pem
restart apache/nginx
Virtualmin Solution:
Go to Virtualmin -> Server Configuration -> SSL Certificate -> CA Certificate
Option 1: Choose upload file and use lets-encrypt-r3-cross-signed.pem
Option 2: Paste the contents of lets-encrypt-r3-cross-signed.pem using the Pasted certificate text option.
Press "Save Certificate"
Note:
This issue was fixed on webmin 1.970, so make sure you've the latest version installed, which wasn't my case due to the webmin repo not being enabled. If that's also your case, just enable or add the webmin repo and run yum update.
I’ve been trying to access this particular REST service from a PHP page I’ve created on our server. I narrowed the problem down to these two lines. So my PHP page looks like this:
<?php
$response = file_get_contents("https://maps.co.weber.ut.us/arcgis/rest/services/SDE_composite_locator/GeocodeServer/findAddressCandidates?Street=&SingleLine=3042+N+1050+W&outFields=*&outSR=102100&searchExtent=&f=json");
echo $response; ?>
The page dies on line 2 with the following errors:
Warning: file_get_contents(): SSL operation failed with code 1.
OpenSSL Error messages: error:14090086:SSL
routines:SSL3_GET_SERVER_CERTIFICATE:certificate verify failed in
...php on line 2
Warning: file_get_contents(): Failed to enable crypto in ...php on
line 2
Warning:
file_get_contents(https://maps.co.weber.ut.us/arcgis/rest/services/SDE_composite_locator/GeocodeServer/findAddressCandidates?Street=&SingleLine=3042+N+1050+W&outFields=*&outSR=102100&searchExtent=&f=json):
failed to open stream: operation failed in ...php on line 2
We’re using a Gentoo server. We recently upgraded to PHP version 5.6. It was after the upgrade when this problem appeared.
I found when I replace the REST service with an address like https://www.google.com; my page works just fine.
In an earlier attempt I set “verify_peer”=>false, and passed that in as an argument to file_get_contents, as described here: file_get_contents ignoring verify_peer=>false? But like the writer noted; it made no difference.
I’ve asked one of our server administrators if these lines in our php.ini file exist:
extension=php_openssl.dll
allow_url_fopen = On
He told me that since we’re on Gentoo, openssl is compiled when we build; and it’s not set in the php.ini file.
I also confirmed that allow_url_fopen is working. Due to the specialized nature of this problem; I’m not finding a lot of information for help. Have any of you come across something like this? Thanks.
This was an enormously helpful link to find:
http://php.net/manual/en/migration56.openssl.php
An official document describing the changes made to open ssl in PHP 5.6
From here I learned of one more parameter I should have set to false: "verify_peer_name"=>false
Note: This has very significant security implications. Disabling verification potentially permits a MITM attacker to use an invalid certificate to eavesdrop on the requests. While it may be useful to do this in local development, other approaches should be used in production.
So my working code looks like this:
<?php
$arrContextOptions=array(
"ssl"=>array(
"verify_peer"=>false,
"verify_peer_name"=>false,
),
);
$response = file_get_contents("https://maps.co.weber.ut.us/arcgis/rest/services/SDE_composite_locator/GeocodeServer/findAddressCandidates?Street=&SingleLine=3042+N+1050+W&outFields=*&outSR=102100&searchExtent=&f=json", false, stream_context_create($arrContextOptions));
echo $response; ?>
You shouldn't just turn off verification. Rather you should download a certificate bundle, perhaps the curl bundle will do?
Then you just need to put it on your web server, giving the user that runs php permission to read the file. Then this code should work for you:
$arrContextOptions= [
'ssl' => [
'cafile' => '/path/to/bundle/cacert.pem',
'verify_peer'=> true,
'verify_peer_name'=> true,
],
];
$response = file_get_contents(
'https://maps.co.weber.ut.us/arcgis/rest/services/SDE_composite_locator/GeocodeServer/findAddressCandidates?Street=&SingleLine=3042+N+1050+W&outFields=*&outSR=102100&searchExtent=&f=json',
false,
stream_context_create($arrContextOptions)
);
Hopefully, the root certificate of the site you are trying to access is in the curl bundle. If it isn't, this still won't work until you get the root certificate of the site and put it into your certificate file.
I fixed this by making sure that that OpenSSL was installed on my machine and then adding this to my php.ini:
openssl.cafile=/usr/local/etc/openssl/cert.pem
You can get around this problem by writing a custom function that uses curl, as in:
function file_get_contents_curl( $url ) {
$ch = curl_init();
curl_setopt( $ch, CURLOPT_AUTOREFERER, TRUE );
curl_setopt( $ch, CURLOPT_HEADER, 0 );
curl_setopt( $ch, CURLOPT_RETURNTRANSFER, 1 );
curl_setopt( $ch, CURLOPT_URL, $url );
curl_setopt( $ch, CURLOPT_FOLLOWLOCATION, TRUE );
$data = curl_exec( $ch );
curl_close( $ch );
return $data;
}
Then just use file_get_contents_curl instead of file_get_contents whenever you're calling a url that begins with https.
Working for me, I am using PHP 5.6. openssl extension should be enabled and while calling google map api verify_peer make false
Below code is working for me.
<?php
$arrContextOptions=array(
"ssl"=>array(
"verify_peer"=>false,
"verify_peer_name"=>false,
),
);
$url = "https://maps.googleapis.com/maps/api/geocode/json?latlng="
. $latitude
. ","
. $longitude
. "&sensor=false&key="
. Yii::$app->params['GOOGLE_API_KEY'];
$data = file_get_contents($url, false, stream_context_create($arrContextOptions));
echo $data;
?>
At first you need to have enabled curl extension in PHP. Then you can use this function:
function file_get_contents_ssl($url) {
$ch = curl_init();
curl_setopt($ch, CURLOPT_SSL_VERIFYPEER, FALSE);
curl_setopt($ch, CURLOPT_HEADER, false);
curl_setopt($ch, CURLOPT_FOLLOWLOCATION, true);
curl_setopt($ch, CURLOPT_URL, $url);
curl_setopt($ch, CURLOPT_REFERER, $url);
curl_setopt($ch, CURLOPT_RETURNTRANSFER, TRUE);
curl_setopt($ch, CURLOPT_CONNECTTIMEOUT, 3000); // 3 sec.
curl_setopt($ch, CURLOPT_TIMEOUT, 10000); // 10 sec.
$result = curl_exec($ch);
curl_close($ch);
return $result;
}
It works similar to function file_get_contents(..).
Example:
echo file_get_contents_ssl("https://www.example.com/");
Output:
<!doctype html>
<html>
<head>
<title>Example Domain</title>
...
After falling victim to this problem on centOS after updating php to php5.6 I found a solution that worked for me.
Get the correct directory for your certs to be placed by default with this
php -r "print_r(openssl_get_cert_locations()['default_cert_file']);"
Then use this to get the cert and put it in the default location found from the code above
wget http://curl.haxx.se/ca/cacert.pem -O <default location>
You basically have to set the environment variable SSL_CERT_FILE to the path of the PEM file of the ssl-certificate downloaded from the following link : http://curl.haxx.se/ca/cacert.pem.
It took me a lot of time to figure this out.
If your PHP version is 5, try installing cURL by typing the following command in the terminal:
sudo apt-get install php5-curl
following below steps will fix this issue,
Download the CA Certificate from this link: https://curl.haxx.se/ca/cacert.pem
Find and open php.ini
Look for curl.cainfo and paste the absolute path where you have download the Certificate. curl.cainfo ="C:\wamp\htdocs\cert\cacert.pem"
Restart WAMP/XAMPP (apache server).
It works!
hope that helps !!
Just wanted to add to this since I ran into the same problem and nothing I could find anywhere would work (e.g downloading the cacert.pem file, setting cafile in php.ini etc.)
If you are using NGINX and your SSL certificate comes with an "intermediate certificate", you need to combine the intermediate cert file with your main "mydomain.com.crt" file and it should work. Apache has a setting specific for intermediate certs, but NGINX does not so it must be within same file as your regular cert.
Reason for this error is that PHP does not have a list of trusted certificate authorities.
PHP 5.6 and later try to load the CAs trusted by the system automatically. Issues with that can be fixed. See http://php.net/manual/en/migration56.openssl.php for more information.
PHP 5.5 and earlier are really hard to setup correctly since you manually have to specify the CA bundle in each request context, a thing you do not want to sprinkle around your code.
So I decided for my code that for PHP versions < 5.6, SSL verification simply gets disabled:
$req = new HTTP_Request2($url);
if (version_compare(PHP_VERSION, '5.6.0', '<')) {
//correct ssl validation on php 5.5 is a pain, so disable
$req->setConfig('ssl_verify_host', false);
$req->setConfig('ssl_verify_peer', false);
}
Had the same error with PHP 7 on XAMPP and OSX.
The above mentioned answer in https://stackoverflow.com/ is good, but it did not completely solve the problem for me. I had to provide the complete certificate chain to make file_get_contents() work again. That's how I did it:
Get root / intermediate certificate
First of all I had to figure out what's the root and the intermediate certificate.
The most convenient way is maybe an online cert-tool like the ssl-shopper
There I found three certificates, one server-certificate and two chain-certificates (one is the root, the other one apparantly the intermediate).
All I need to do is just search the internet for both of them. In my case, this is the root:
thawte DV SSL SHA256 CA
And it leads to his url thawte.com. So I just put this cert into a textfile and did the same for the intermediate. Done.
Get the host certificate
Next thing I had to to is to download my server cert. On Linux or OS X it can be done with openssl:
openssl s_client -showcerts -connect whatsyoururl.de:443 </dev/null 2>/dev/null|openssl x509 -outform PEM > /tmp/whatsyoururl.de.cert
Now bring them all together
Now just merge all of them into one file. (Maybe it's good to just put them into one folder, I just merged them into one file). You can do it like this:
cat /tmp/thawteRoot.crt > /tmp/chain.crt
cat /tmp/thawteIntermediate.crt >> /tmp/chain.crt
cat /tmp/tmp/whatsyoururl.de.cert >> /tmp/chain.crt
tell PHP where to find the chain
There is this handy function openssl_get_cert_locations() that'll tell you, where PHP is looking for cert files. And there is this parameter, that will tell file_get_contents() where to look for cert files. Maybe both ways will work. I preferred the parameter way. (Compared to the solution mentioned above).
So this is now my PHP-Code
$arrContextOptions=array(
"ssl"=>array(
"cafile" => "/Applications/XAMPP/xamppfiles/share/openssl/certs/chain.pem",
"verify_peer"=> true,
"verify_peer_name"=> true,
),
);
$response = file_get_contents($myHttpsURL, 0, stream_context_create($arrContextOptions));
That's all. file_get_contents() is working again. Without CURL and hopefully without security flaws.
<?php
$stream_context = stream_context_create([
"ssl" => [
"verify_peer" => false,
"verify_peer_name" => false
]
]);
$response = file_get_contents("https://maps.co.weber.ut.us/arcgis/rest/services/SDE_composite_locator/GeocodeServer/findAddressCandidates?Street=&SingleLine=3042+N+1050+W&outFields=*&outSR=102100&searchExtent=&f=json", false, $stream_context);
echo $response;
?>
Just tested of PHP 7.2, it's working well.
EDIT: Also tested and working on PHP 7.1
Had the same ssl-problem on my developer machine (php 7, xampp on windows) with a self signed certificate trying to fopen a "https://localhost/..."-file. Obviously the root-certificate-assembly (cacert.pem) didn't work.
I just copied manually the code from the apache server.crt-File in the downloaded cacert.pem and did the openssl.cafile=path/to/cacert.pem entry in php.ini
Another thing to try is to re-install ca-certificates as detailed here.
# yum reinstall ca-certificates
...
# update-ca-trust force-enable
# update-ca-trust extract
And another thing to try is to explicitly allow the one site's certificate in question as described here (especially if the one site is your own server and you already have the .pem in reach).
# cp /your/site.pem /etc/pki/ca-trust/source/anchors/
# update-ca-trust extract
I was running into this exact SO error after upgrading to PHP 5.6 on CentOS 6 trying to access the server itself which has a cheapsslsecurity certificate which maybe it needed to be updated, but instead I installed a letsencrypt certificate and with these two steps above it did the trick. I don't know why the second step was necessary.
Useful Commands
View openssl version:
# openssl version
OpenSSL 1.0.1e-fips 11 Feb 2013
View PHP cli ssl current settings:
# php -i | grep ssl
openssl
Openssl default config => /etc/pki/tls/openssl.cnf
openssl.cafile => no value => no value
openssl.capath => no value => no value
Regarding errors similar to
[11-May-2017 19:19:13 America/Chicago] PHP Warning: file_get_contents(): SSL operation failed with code 1. OpenSSL Error messages:
error:14090086:SSL routines:ssl3_get_server_certificate:certificate verify failed
Have you checked the permissions of the cert and directories referenced by openssl?
You can do this
var_dump(openssl_get_cert_locations());
To get something similar to this
array(8) {
["default_cert_file"]=>
string(21) "/usr/lib/ssl/cert.pem"
["default_cert_file_env"]=>
string(13) "SSL_CERT_FILE"
["default_cert_dir"]=>
string(18) "/usr/lib/ssl/certs"
["default_cert_dir_env"]=>
string(12) "SSL_CERT_DIR"
["default_private_dir"]=>
string(20) "/usr/lib/ssl/private"
["default_default_cert_area"]=>
string(12) "/usr/lib/ssl"
["ini_cafile"]=>
string(0) ""
["ini_capath"]=>
string(0) ""
}
This issue frustrated me for a while, until I realized that my "certs" folder had 700 permissions, when it should have had 755 permissions. Remember, this is not the folder for keys but certificates. I recommend reading this this link on ssl permissions.
Once I did
chmod 755 certs
The problem was fixed, at least for me anyway.
Fix for macos 12.4 / Mamp 6.6 / Homebrew 3.5.2 / Openssl#3
Terminal
Check version
openssl version -a
Mine was pointing to:
...
OPENSSLDIR: "/opt/homebrew/etc/openssl#3"
...
So I looked through homebrew's dir /opt/homebrew/etc/openssl#3 and found the cert.pem and made sure my Mamp's current version of php's php.ini file was pointing to homebrew's correct openssl version's cert.pem
add to php.ini
openssl.cafile=/opt/homebrew/etc/openssl#3/cert.pem
I had the same issue for another secure page when using wget or file_get_contents. A lot of research (including some of the responses on this question) resulted in a simple solution - installing Curl and PHP-Curl - If I've understood correctly, Curl has the Root CA for Comodo which resolved the issue
Install Curl and PHP-Curl addon, then restart Apache
sudo apt-get install curl
sudo apt-get install php-curl
sudo /etc/init.d/apache2 reload
All now working.
For me, I was running XAMPP on a Windows 10 machine (localhost) and recently upgraded to PHP 8. I was trying to open a localhost HTTPS link via file_get_contents().
In my php.ini file, there was a line that read:
openssl.cafile="C:\Users\[USER]\xampp\apache\bin\curl-ca-bundle.crt"
This was the certificate bundle being used to validate "outside" URLs, and was a package from Mozilla as some people have discussed. I don't know if XAMPP came that way or if I set it up in the past.
At some point I had set up HTTPS on my localhost, resulting in another certificate bundle. This bundle needed to be used to validate "localhost" URLs. To remind myself where that bundle was, I opened httpd-ssl.conf and found the line that read:
SSLCertificateFile "conf/ssl.crt/server.crt"
(The complete path was C:\Users[USER]\xampp\apache\conf\ssl.crt\server.crt)
To make both localhost and outside URLs work simultaneously, I copied the contents of my localhost "server.crt" file into Mozilla's bundle "curl-ca-bundle.crt".
.
.
.
m7I1HrrW9zzRHM76JTymGoEVW/MSD2zuZYrJh6j5B+BimoxcSg==
-----END CERTIFICATE-----
Localhost--I manually added this
================================
-----BEGIN CERTIFICATE-----
MIIDGDCCAgCgAwIBAgIQIH+mTLNOSKlD8KMZwr5P3TANBgkqhkiG9w0BAQsFADAU
...
At that point I could use file_get_contents() with both localhost URLs and outside URLs with no additional configuration.
file_get_contents("https://localhost/...");
file_get_contents("https://google.com");
$csm = stream_context_create(['ssl' => ['capture_session_meta' => TRUE]]);
$sourceCountry = file_get_contents("https://api.wipmania.com/{$ip}?website.com", FALSE, $csm);
echo $sourceCountry;
Similar questions have been answered before, but I haven't been able to solve this particular case.
On a PHP 5.6+ machine when I try to use fsockopen on a particular domain I receive the following (not the real domain):
$ php -r "var_dump(fsockopen(\"ssl://www.domain.net\", 9085, \$errnum, \$errstr, 5));"
PHP Warning: fsockopen(): Failed to enable crypto in Command line code on line 1
PHP Warning: fsockopen(): unable to connect to ssl://www.domain.net:9085 (Unknown error) in Command line code on line 1
bool(false)
This works fine on PHP 5.5, which points to it being by the change in 5.6 dealing with the way fsockopen verifies ssl certificates.
Other connections can be made without issue:
$ php -r "var_dump(fsockopen(\"ssl://www.google.com\", 443, \$errnum, \$errstr, 5));"
resource(4) of type (stream)
Based on other suggestions I've checked the default cert file
$ php -r "print_r(openssl_get_cert_locations());"
Array
(
[default_cert_file] => /usr/lib/ssl/cert.pem
[default_cert_file_env] => SSL_CERT_FILE
[default_cert_dir] => /usr/lib/ssl/certs
[default_cert_dir_env] => SSL_CERT_DIR
[default_private_dir] => /usr/lib/ssl/private
[default_default_cert_area] => /usr/lib/ssl
[ini_cafile] =>
[ini_capath] =>
)
The file /usr/lib/ssl/cert.pem was originally missing, I download the ca bundle from curl and renamed it to match. Still no luck.
I'm not receiving any additional information indicating that verifying the certificate fails. Are there any other ways to debug the issue?
After much head bashing, I finally discovered the cause.
PHP 5.6 implemented a default set of support ciphers, which removed support for older more vulnerable ones. http://php.net/manual/en/migration56.openssl.php
The default ciphers used by PHP have been updated to a more secure list based on the » Mozilla cipher recommendations, with two additional exclusions: anonymous Diffie-Hellman ciphers, and RC4. The domain I was attempting to connected currently supports TLSv1/SSLv3, Cipher RC4-MD5
Do work around the issue I switched to stream_socket_client instead of fsockopen. Added RC4-MD5 to stream cipher support in the context:
$context = stream_context_create(['ssl' => [
'ciphers' => 'RC4-MD5'
]]);
$socket = stream_socket_client('ssl://'.$host.':'.$port, $errno, $errstr, 30, STREAM_CLIENT_CONNECT, $context);
I’ve been trying to access this particular REST service from a PHP page I’ve created on our server. I narrowed the problem down to these two lines. So my PHP page looks like this:
<?php
$response = file_get_contents("https://maps.co.weber.ut.us/arcgis/rest/services/SDE_composite_locator/GeocodeServer/findAddressCandidates?Street=&SingleLine=3042+N+1050+W&outFields=*&outSR=102100&searchExtent=&f=json");
echo $response; ?>
The page dies on line 2 with the following errors:
Warning: file_get_contents(): SSL operation failed with code 1.
OpenSSL Error messages: error:14090086:SSL
routines:SSL3_GET_SERVER_CERTIFICATE:certificate verify failed in
...php on line 2
Warning: file_get_contents(): Failed to enable crypto in ...php on
line 2
Warning:
file_get_contents(https://maps.co.weber.ut.us/arcgis/rest/services/SDE_composite_locator/GeocodeServer/findAddressCandidates?Street=&SingleLine=3042+N+1050+W&outFields=*&outSR=102100&searchExtent=&f=json):
failed to open stream: operation failed in ...php on line 2
We’re using a Gentoo server. We recently upgraded to PHP version 5.6. It was after the upgrade when this problem appeared.
I found when I replace the REST service with an address like https://www.google.com; my page works just fine.
In an earlier attempt I set “verify_peer”=>false, and passed that in as an argument to file_get_contents, as described here: file_get_contents ignoring verify_peer=>false? But like the writer noted; it made no difference.
I’ve asked one of our server administrators if these lines in our php.ini file exist:
extension=php_openssl.dll
allow_url_fopen = On
He told me that since we’re on Gentoo, openssl is compiled when we build; and it’s not set in the php.ini file.
I also confirmed that allow_url_fopen is working. Due to the specialized nature of this problem; I’m not finding a lot of information for help. Have any of you come across something like this? Thanks.
This was an enormously helpful link to find:
http://php.net/manual/en/migration56.openssl.php
An official document describing the changes made to open ssl in PHP 5.6
From here I learned of one more parameter I should have set to false: "verify_peer_name"=>false
Note: This has very significant security implications. Disabling verification potentially permits a MITM attacker to use an invalid certificate to eavesdrop on the requests. While it may be useful to do this in local development, other approaches should be used in production.
So my working code looks like this:
<?php
$arrContextOptions=array(
"ssl"=>array(
"verify_peer"=>false,
"verify_peer_name"=>false,
),
);
$response = file_get_contents("https://maps.co.weber.ut.us/arcgis/rest/services/SDE_composite_locator/GeocodeServer/findAddressCandidates?Street=&SingleLine=3042+N+1050+W&outFields=*&outSR=102100&searchExtent=&f=json", false, stream_context_create($arrContextOptions));
echo $response; ?>
You shouldn't just turn off verification. Rather you should download a certificate bundle, perhaps the curl bundle will do?
Then you just need to put it on your web server, giving the user that runs php permission to read the file. Then this code should work for you:
$arrContextOptions= [
'ssl' => [
'cafile' => '/path/to/bundle/cacert.pem',
'verify_peer'=> true,
'verify_peer_name'=> true,
],
];
$response = file_get_contents(
'https://maps.co.weber.ut.us/arcgis/rest/services/SDE_composite_locator/GeocodeServer/findAddressCandidates?Street=&SingleLine=3042+N+1050+W&outFields=*&outSR=102100&searchExtent=&f=json',
false,
stream_context_create($arrContextOptions)
);
Hopefully, the root certificate of the site you are trying to access is in the curl bundle. If it isn't, this still won't work until you get the root certificate of the site and put it into your certificate file.
I fixed this by making sure that that OpenSSL was installed on my machine and then adding this to my php.ini:
openssl.cafile=/usr/local/etc/openssl/cert.pem
You can get around this problem by writing a custom function that uses curl, as in:
function file_get_contents_curl( $url ) {
$ch = curl_init();
curl_setopt( $ch, CURLOPT_AUTOREFERER, TRUE );
curl_setopt( $ch, CURLOPT_HEADER, 0 );
curl_setopt( $ch, CURLOPT_RETURNTRANSFER, 1 );
curl_setopt( $ch, CURLOPT_URL, $url );
curl_setopt( $ch, CURLOPT_FOLLOWLOCATION, TRUE );
$data = curl_exec( $ch );
curl_close( $ch );
return $data;
}
Then just use file_get_contents_curl instead of file_get_contents whenever you're calling a url that begins with https.
Working for me, I am using PHP 5.6. openssl extension should be enabled and while calling google map api verify_peer make false
Below code is working for me.
<?php
$arrContextOptions=array(
"ssl"=>array(
"verify_peer"=>false,
"verify_peer_name"=>false,
),
);
$url = "https://maps.googleapis.com/maps/api/geocode/json?latlng="
. $latitude
. ","
. $longitude
. "&sensor=false&key="
. Yii::$app->params['GOOGLE_API_KEY'];
$data = file_get_contents($url, false, stream_context_create($arrContextOptions));
echo $data;
?>
After falling victim to this problem on centOS after updating php to php5.6 I found a solution that worked for me.
Get the correct directory for your certs to be placed by default with this
php -r "print_r(openssl_get_cert_locations()['default_cert_file']);"
Then use this to get the cert and put it in the default location found from the code above
wget http://curl.haxx.se/ca/cacert.pem -O <default location>
At first you need to have enabled curl extension in PHP. Then you can use this function:
function file_get_contents_ssl($url) {
$ch = curl_init();
curl_setopt($ch, CURLOPT_SSL_VERIFYPEER, FALSE);
curl_setopt($ch, CURLOPT_HEADER, false);
curl_setopt($ch, CURLOPT_FOLLOWLOCATION, true);
curl_setopt($ch, CURLOPT_URL, $url);
curl_setopt($ch, CURLOPT_REFERER, $url);
curl_setopt($ch, CURLOPT_RETURNTRANSFER, TRUE);
curl_setopt($ch, CURLOPT_CONNECTTIMEOUT, 3000); // 3 sec.
curl_setopt($ch, CURLOPT_TIMEOUT, 10000); // 10 sec.
$result = curl_exec($ch);
curl_close($ch);
return $result;
}
It works similar to function file_get_contents(..).
Example:
echo file_get_contents_ssl("https://www.example.com/");
Output:
<!doctype html>
<html>
<head>
<title>Example Domain</title>
...
You basically have to set the environment variable SSL_CERT_FILE to the path of the PEM file of the ssl-certificate downloaded from the following link : http://curl.haxx.se/ca/cacert.pem.
It took me a lot of time to figure this out.
If your PHP version is 5, try installing cURL by typing the following command in the terminal:
sudo apt-get install php5-curl
following below steps will fix this issue,
Download the CA Certificate from this link: https://curl.haxx.se/ca/cacert.pem
Find and open php.ini
Look for curl.cainfo and paste the absolute path where you have download the Certificate. curl.cainfo ="C:\wamp\htdocs\cert\cacert.pem"
Restart WAMP/XAMPP (apache server).
It works!
hope that helps !!
Just wanted to add to this since I ran into the same problem and nothing I could find anywhere would work (e.g downloading the cacert.pem file, setting cafile in php.ini etc.)
If you are using NGINX and your SSL certificate comes with an "intermediate certificate", you need to combine the intermediate cert file with your main "mydomain.com.crt" file and it should work. Apache has a setting specific for intermediate certs, but NGINX does not so it must be within same file as your regular cert.
Reason for this error is that PHP does not have a list of trusted certificate authorities.
PHP 5.6 and later try to load the CAs trusted by the system automatically. Issues with that can be fixed. See http://php.net/manual/en/migration56.openssl.php for more information.
PHP 5.5 and earlier are really hard to setup correctly since you manually have to specify the CA bundle in each request context, a thing you do not want to sprinkle around your code.
So I decided for my code that for PHP versions < 5.6, SSL verification simply gets disabled:
$req = new HTTP_Request2($url);
if (version_compare(PHP_VERSION, '5.6.0', '<')) {
//correct ssl validation on php 5.5 is a pain, so disable
$req->setConfig('ssl_verify_host', false);
$req->setConfig('ssl_verify_peer', false);
}
Had the same error with PHP 7 on XAMPP and OSX.
The above mentioned answer in https://stackoverflow.com/ is good, but it did not completely solve the problem for me. I had to provide the complete certificate chain to make file_get_contents() work again. That's how I did it:
Get root / intermediate certificate
First of all I had to figure out what's the root and the intermediate certificate.
The most convenient way is maybe an online cert-tool like the ssl-shopper
There I found three certificates, one server-certificate and two chain-certificates (one is the root, the other one apparantly the intermediate).
All I need to do is just search the internet for both of them. In my case, this is the root:
thawte DV SSL SHA256 CA
And it leads to his url thawte.com. So I just put this cert into a textfile and did the same for the intermediate. Done.
Get the host certificate
Next thing I had to to is to download my server cert. On Linux or OS X it can be done with openssl:
openssl s_client -showcerts -connect whatsyoururl.de:443 </dev/null 2>/dev/null|openssl x509 -outform PEM > /tmp/whatsyoururl.de.cert
Now bring them all together
Now just merge all of them into one file. (Maybe it's good to just put them into one folder, I just merged them into one file). You can do it like this:
cat /tmp/thawteRoot.crt > /tmp/chain.crt
cat /tmp/thawteIntermediate.crt >> /tmp/chain.crt
cat /tmp/tmp/whatsyoururl.de.cert >> /tmp/chain.crt
tell PHP where to find the chain
There is this handy function openssl_get_cert_locations() that'll tell you, where PHP is looking for cert files. And there is this parameter, that will tell file_get_contents() where to look for cert files. Maybe both ways will work. I preferred the parameter way. (Compared to the solution mentioned above).
So this is now my PHP-Code
$arrContextOptions=array(
"ssl"=>array(
"cafile" => "/Applications/XAMPP/xamppfiles/share/openssl/certs/chain.pem",
"verify_peer"=> true,
"verify_peer_name"=> true,
),
);
$response = file_get_contents($myHttpsURL, 0, stream_context_create($arrContextOptions));
That's all. file_get_contents() is working again. Without CURL and hopefully without security flaws.
<?php
$stream_context = stream_context_create([
"ssl" => [
"verify_peer" => false,
"verify_peer_name" => false
]
]);
$response = file_get_contents("https://maps.co.weber.ut.us/arcgis/rest/services/SDE_composite_locator/GeocodeServer/findAddressCandidates?Street=&SingleLine=3042+N+1050+W&outFields=*&outSR=102100&searchExtent=&f=json", false, $stream_context);
echo $response;
?>
Just tested of PHP 7.2, it's working well.
EDIT: Also tested and working on PHP 7.1
Had the same ssl-problem on my developer machine (php 7, xampp on windows) with a self signed certificate trying to fopen a "https://localhost/..."-file. Obviously the root-certificate-assembly (cacert.pem) didn't work.
I just copied manually the code from the apache server.crt-File in the downloaded cacert.pem and did the openssl.cafile=path/to/cacert.pem entry in php.ini
Another thing to try is to re-install ca-certificates as detailed here.
# yum reinstall ca-certificates
...
# update-ca-trust force-enable
# update-ca-trust extract
And another thing to try is to explicitly allow the one site's certificate in question as described here (especially if the one site is your own server and you already have the .pem in reach).
# cp /your/site.pem /etc/pki/ca-trust/source/anchors/
# update-ca-trust extract
I was running into this exact SO error after upgrading to PHP 5.6 on CentOS 6 trying to access the server itself which has a cheapsslsecurity certificate which maybe it needed to be updated, but instead I installed a letsencrypt certificate and with these two steps above it did the trick. I don't know why the second step was necessary.
Useful Commands
View openssl version:
# openssl version
OpenSSL 1.0.1e-fips 11 Feb 2013
View PHP cli ssl current settings:
# php -i | grep ssl
openssl
Openssl default config => /etc/pki/tls/openssl.cnf
openssl.cafile => no value => no value
openssl.capath => no value => no value
Regarding errors similar to
[11-May-2017 19:19:13 America/Chicago] PHP Warning: file_get_contents(): SSL operation failed with code 1. OpenSSL Error messages:
error:14090086:SSL routines:ssl3_get_server_certificate:certificate verify failed
Have you checked the permissions of the cert and directories referenced by openssl?
You can do this
var_dump(openssl_get_cert_locations());
To get something similar to this
array(8) {
["default_cert_file"]=>
string(21) "/usr/lib/ssl/cert.pem"
["default_cert_file_env"]=>
string(13) "SSL_CERT_FILE"
["default_cert_dir"]=>
string(18) "/usr/lib/ssl/certs"
["default_cert_dir_env"]=>
string(12) "SSL_CERT_DIR"
["default_private_dir"]=>
string(20) "/usr/lib/ssl/private"
["default_default_cert_area"]=>
string(12) "/usr/lib/ssl"
["ini_cafile"]=>
string(0) ""
["ini_capath"]=>
string(0) ""
}
This issue frustrated me for a while, until I realized that my "certs" folder had 700 permissions, when it should have had 755 permissions. Remember, this is not the folder for keys but certificates. I recommend reading this this link on ssl permissions.
Once I did
chmod 755 certs
The problem was fixed, at least for me anyway.
Fix for macos 12.4 / Mamp 6.6 / Homebrew 3.5.2 / Openssl#3
Terminal
Check version
openssl version -a
Mine was pointing to:
...
OPENSSLDIR: "/opt/homebrew/etc/openssl#3"
...
So I looked through homebrew's dir /opt/homebrew/etc/openssl#3 and found the cert.pem and made sure my Mamp's current version of php's php.ini file was pointing to homebrew's correct openssl version's cert.pem
add to php.ini
openssl.cafile=/opt/homebrew/etc/openssl#3/cert.pem
I had the same issue for another secure page when using wget or file_get_contents. A lot of research (including some of the responses on this question) resulted in a simple solution - installing Curl and PHP-Curl - If I've understood correctly, Curl has the Root CA for Comodo which resolved the issue
Install Curl and PHP-Curl addon, then restart Apache
sudo apt-get install curl
sudo apt-get install php-curl
sudo /etc/init.d/apache2 reload
All now working.
For me, I was running XAMPP on a Windows 10 machine (localhost) and recently upgraded to PHP 8. I was trying to open a localhost HTTPS link via file_get_contents().
In my php.ini file, there was a line that read:
openssl.cafile="C:\Users\[USER]\xampp\apache\bin\curl-ca-bundle.crt"
This was the certificate bundle being used to validate "outside" URLs, and was a package from Mozilla as some people have discussed. I don't know if XAMPP came that way or if I set it up in the past.
At some point I had set up HTTPS on my localhost, resulting in another certificate bundle. This bundle needed to be used to validate "localhost" URLs. To remind myself where that bundle was, I opened httpd-ssl.conf and found the line that read:
SSLCertificateFile "conf/ssl.crt/server.crt"
(The complete path was C:\Users[USER]\xampp\apache\conf\ssl.crt\server.crt)
To make both localhost and outside URLs work simultaneously, I copied the contents of my localhost "server.crt" file into Mozilla's bundle "curl-ca-bundle.crt".
.
.
.
m7I1HrrW9zzRHM76JTymGoEVW/MSD2zuZYrJh6j5B+BimoxcSg==
-----END CERTIFICATE-----
Localhost--I manually added this
================================
-----BEGIN CERTIFICATE-----
MIIDGDCCAgCgAwIBAgIQIH+mTLNOSKlD8KMZwr5P3TANBgkqhkiG9w0BAQsFADAU
...
At that point I could use file_get_contents() with both localhost URLs and outside URLs with no additional configuration.
file_get_contents("https://localhost/...");
file_get_contents("https://google.com");
$csm = stream_context_create(['ssl' => ['capture_session_meta' => TRUE]]);
$sourceCountry = file_get_contents("https://api.wipmania.com/{$ip}?website.com", FALSE, $csm);
echo $sourceCountry;