When I wget https resources, I'm unable to verify the certificates:
I've installed security/ca_root_nss, which is the only maintained root certificate I could find. How do I go about downloading resources with wget without explicitly bypassing the certificate with --no-check-certificate?
I know that fetch() is in the base install, but I'm looking to use this in more complex arrangements, such as batch downloading large sets of files recursively, in a way not supported by fetch or curl. Is there an equivalent to the ca-certificates package on Debian-based distributions to handle the certs correctly?
$ wget [url]https://google.com[/url]
Code:
--2012-06-29 10:56:13-- [url]https://google.com/[/url]
Resolving google.com (google.com)... 74.125.227.137, 74.125.227.142, 74.125.227.128, ...
Connecting to google.com (google.com)|74.125.227.137|:443... connected.
ERROR: cannot verify google.com's certificate, issued by `/C=US/O=Google Inc/CN=Google Internet Authority':
Unable to locally verify the issuer's authority.
To connect to google.com insecurely, use `--no-check-certificate'.
I've installed security/ca_root_nss, which is the only maintained root certificate I could find. How do I go about downloading resources with wget without explicitly bypassing the certificate with --no-check-certificate?
I know that fetch() is in the base install, but I'm looking to use this in more complex arrangements, such as batch downloading large sets of files recursively, in a way not supported by fetch or curl. Is there an equivalent to the ca-certificates package on Debian-based distributions to handle the certs correctly?