OpenSSL: PEM routines:PEM_read_bio:no start line:pem_lib.c:703:Expecting: TRUSTED CERTIFICATE [closed]

只谈情不闲聊 提交于 2019-11-26 12:24:39
nrathaus
  1. Since you are on Windows, make sure that your certificate in Windows "compatible", most importantly that it doesn't have ^M in the end of each line

    If you open it it will look like this:

    -----BEGIN CERTIFICATE-----^M
    MIIDITCCAoqgAwIBAgIQL9+89q6RUm0PmqPfQDQ+mjANBgkqhkiG9w0BAQUFADBM^M
    

    To solve "this" open it with Write or Notepad++ and have it convert it to Windows "style"

  2. Try to run openssl x509 -text -inform DER -in server_cert.pem and see what the output is, it is unlikely that a private/secret key would be untrusted, trust only is needed if you exported the key from a keystore, did you?

Rondo

Another possible cause of this is trying to use the x509 module on something that is not x509

The server certificate is x509 format, but the private key is rsa

So,

openssl rsa -noout -text -in privkey.pem
openssl x509 -noout -text -in servercert.pem

My situation was a little different. The solution was to strip the .pem from everything outside of the CERTIFICATE and PRIVATE KEY sections and to invert the order which they appeared. After converting from pfx to pem file, the certificate looked like this:

Bag Attributes
localKeyID: ...
issuer=...
-----BEGIN CERTIFICATE-----
...
-----END CERTIFICATE-----
Bag Attributes
more garbage...
-----BEGIN PRIVATE KEY-----
...
-----END PRIVATE KEY-----

After correcting the file, it was just:

-----BEGIN PRIVATE KEY-----
...
-----END PRIVATE KEY-----
-----BEGIN CERTIFICATE-----
...
-----END CERTIFICATE-----

I had the same issue using Windows, got if fixed by opening it in Notepad++ and changing the encoding from "UCS-2 LE BOM" to "UTF-8".

My mistake was simply using the CSR file instead of the CERT file.

Change encoding in notepad++ UTF-8 with BOM. That is how it worked for me

You can get this misleading error if you naively try to do this:

[clear] -> Private Key Encrypt -> [encrypted] -> Public Key Decrypt -> [clear]

Encrypting data using a private key is not allowed by design.

You can see from the command line options for open ssl that the only options to encrypt -> decrypt go in one direction public -> private.

  -encrypt        encrypt with public key
  -decrypt        decrypt with private key

The other direction is intentionally prevented because public keys basically "can be guessed." So, encrypting with a private key means the only thing you gain is verifying the author has access to the private key.

The private key encrypt -> public key decrypt direction is called "signing" to differentiate it from being a technique that can actually secure data.

  -sign           sign with private key
  -verify         verify with public key

Note: my description is a simplification for clarity. Read this answer for more information.

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