How do I use a self signed certificate for a HTTPS Node.js server?

Try adding this to your request options

var options = {
  host: 'localhost',
  port: 8000,
  path: '/api/v1/test',
  // These next three lines
  rejectUnauthorized: false,
  requestCert: true,
  agent: false
};

This procedure allows you to create both a certificate authority & a certificate :

  1. grab this ca.cnf file to use as a configuration shortcut :

    wget https://raw.githubusercontent.com/anders94/https-authorized-clients/master/keys/ca.cnf


  1. create a new certificate authority using this configuration :

    openssl req -new -x509 -days 9999 -config ca.cnf -keyout ca-key.pem -out ca-cert.pem


  1. now that we have our certificate authority in ca-key.pem and ca-cert.pem, let's generate a private key for the server :

    openssl genrsa -out key.pem 4096


  1. grab this server.cnf file to use as a configuration shortcut :

    wget https://raw.githubusercontent.com/anders94/https-authorized-clients/master/keys/server.cnf


  1. generate the certificate signing request using this configuration :

    openssl req -new -config server.cnf -key key.pem -out csr.pem


  1. sign the request :

    openssl x509 -req -extfile server.cnf -days 999 -passin "pass:password" -in csr.pem -CA ca-cert.pem -CAkey ca-key.pem -CAcreateserial -out cert.pem

I found this procedure here, along with more information on how to use these certificates.


Update (Nov 2018): Do you need self-signed certs?

Or would real certificates get the job done better? Have you considered any of these?

  • Let's Encrypt via Greenlock.js
  • Let's Encrypt via https://greenlock.domains
  • Localhost relay service such as https://telebit.cloud

(Note: Let's Encrypt can also issue certificates to private networks)

ScreenCast

https://coolaj86.com/articles/how-to-create-a-csr-for-https-tls-ssl-rsa-pems/

Full, Working example

  • creates certificates
  • runs node.js server
  • no warnings or errors in node.js client
  • no warnings or errors in cURL

https://github.com/coolaj86/nodejs-self-signed-certificate-example

Using localhost.greenlock.domains as an example (it points to 127.0.0.1):

server.js

'use strict';

var https = require('https')
  , port = process.argv[2] || 8043
  , fs = require('fs')
  , path = require('path')
  , server
  , options
  ;

require('ssl-root-cas')
  .inject()
  .addFile(path.join(__dirname, 'server', 'my-private-root-ca.cert.pem'))
  ;

options = {
  // this is ONLY the PRIVATE KEY
  key: fs.readFileSync(path.join(__dirname, 'server', 'privkey.pem'))
  // You DO NOT specify `ca`, that's only for peer authentication
//, ca: [ fs.readFileSync(path.join(__dirname, 'server', 'my-private-root-ca.cert.pem'))]
  // This should contain both cert.pem AND chain.pem (in that order) 
, cert: fs.readFileSync(path.join(__dirname, 'server', 'fullchain.pem'))
};


function app(req, res) {
  res.setHeader('Content-Type', 'text/plain');
  res.end('Hello, encrypted world!');
}

server = https.createServer(options, app).listen(port, function () {
  port = server.address().port;
  console.log('Listening on https://127.0.0.1:' + port);
  console.log('Listening on https://' + server.address().address + ':' + port);
  console.log('Listening on https://localhost.greenlock.domains:' + port);
});

client.js

'use strict';

var https = require('https')
  , fs = require('fs')
  , path = require('path')
  , ca = fs.readFileSync(path.join(__dirname, 'client', 'my-private-root-ca.cert.pem'))
  , port = process.argv[2] || 8043
  , hostname = process.argv[3] || 'localhost.greenlock.domains'
  ;

var options = {
  host: hostname
, port: port
, path: '/'
, ca: ca
};
options.agent = new https.Agent(options);

https.request(options, function(res) {
  res.pipe(process.stdout);
}).end();

And the script that makes the certificate files:

make-certs.sh

#!/bin/bash
FQDN=$1

# make directories to work from
mkdir -p server/ client/ all/

# Create your very own Root Certificate Authority
openssl genrsa \
  -out all/my-private-root-ca.privkey.pem \
  2048

# Self-sign your Root Certificate Authority
# Since this is private, the details can be as bogus as you like
openssl req \
  -x509 \
  -new \
  -nodes \
  -key all/my-private-root-ca.privkey.pem \
  -days 1024 \
  -out all/my-private-root-ca.cert.pem \
  -subj "/C=US/ST=Utah/L=Provo/O=ACME Signing Authority Inc/CN=example.com"

# Create a Device Certificate for each domain,
# such as example.com, *.example.com, awesome.example.com
# NOTE: You MUST match CN to the domain name or ip address you want to use
openssl genrsa \
  -out all/privkey.pem \
  2048

# Create a request from your Device, which your Root CA will sign
openssl req -new \
  -key all/privkey.pem \
  -out all/csr.pem \
  -subj "/C=US/ST=Utah/L=Provo/O=ACME Tech Inc/CN=${FQDN}"

# Sign the request from Device with your Root CA
openssl x509 \
  -req -in all/csr.pem \
  -CA all/my-private-root-ca.cert.pem \
  -CAkey all/my-private-root-ca.privkey.pem \
  -CAcreateserial \
  -out all/cert.pem \
  -days 500

# Put things in their proper place
rsync -a all/{privkey,cert}.pem server/
cat all/cert.pem > server/fullchain.pem         # we have no intermediates in this case
rsync -a all/my-private-root-ca.cert.pem server/
rsync -a all/my-private-root-ca.cert.pem client/

# create DER format crt for iOS Mobile Safari, etc
openssl x509 -outform der -in all/my-private-root-ca.cert.pem -out client/my-private-root-ca.crt

For example:

bash make-certs.sh 'localhost.greenlock.domains'

Hopefully this puts the nail in the coffin on this one.

And some more explanation: https://github.com/coolaj86/node-ssl-root-cas/wiki/Painless-Self-Signed-Certificates-in-node.js

Install private cert on iOS Mobile Safari

You need to create a copy of the root ca certificate a DER format with a .crt extension:

# create DER format crt for iOS Mobile Safari, etc
openssl x509 -outform der -in all/my-private-root-ca.cert.pem -out client/my-private-root-ca.crt

Then you can simply serve that file with your webserver. When you click the link you should be asked if you want to install the certificate.

For an example of how this works you can try installing MIT's Certificate Authority: https://ca.mit.edu/mitca.crt

Related Examples

  • https://github.com/coolaj86/nodejs-ssl-example
  • https://github.com/coolaj86/nodejs-ssl-trusted-peer-example
  • https://github.com/coolaj86/node-ssl-root-cas
  • https://github.com/coolaj86/nodejs-https-sni-vhost-example
    • (Multiple vhosts with SSL on the same server)
  • https://telebit.cloud
    • (get REAL SSL certs you can use TODAY for testing on localhost)

Your key generation looks okay. You shouldn't need a ca because you aren't rejecting unsigned requests.

Add .toString() to the end of your readFileSync methods so that you are actually passing a string, not a file object.

Tags:

Ssl

Https

Node.Js