Get Windows System Root certificates for Node.js.
Unlike Ruby, Node.js on Windows allows HTTPS requests out-of-box. But it is implemented in a rather bizzare way:
Node uses a statically compiled, manually updated, hardcoded list of certificate authorities, rather than relying on the system's trust store... Read more
It's very strange behavour under any OS, but Windows differs from most of them by having its own trust store, fully incompatible with OpenSSL.
This package is intended to fetch Root CAs from Windows' store and make them available to Node.js application with minimal efforts.
- No internet access is required at all
- Windows store is updated automatically (in most modern environments)
- Manually installed Root certificates are used
- Enterpise trusted certificates (GPO etc.) are made available too
Just say npm install --save win-ca
and then call require('win-ca')
.
It is safe to use it under other OSes (not M$ Windows).
After require('win-ca')
Windows' Root CAs
are found, deduplicated
and installed to https.globalAgent.options.ca
so they are automatically used for all
requests with Node.js' https module.
For use in other places, these certificates
are available via .all()
method
(in node-forge's format).
ca = require 'win-ca'
forge = require 'node-forge'
for crt in ca.all()
dst.write forge.pki.certificateToPem crt
One can enumerate Root CAs himself using .each()
method:
ca = require 'win-ca'
ca.each (crt)->
dst.write forge.pki.certificateToPem crt
But this list may contain duplicates.
Asynchronous enumeration is provided via .async()
method:
ca = require 'win-ca'
ca.async (error, crt)->
throw error if error
if crt
dst.write forge.pki.certificateToPem crt
else
console.log "That's all folks!"
Finally, win-ca
saves fetched ceritificates to disk
for use by other soft.
Path to folder containing all the certificates
is available as require('win-ca').path
.
Environment variable SSL_CERT_DIR
is set to point at it,
so OpenSSL-based software will use it automatically.
The layout of that folder mimics
that of OpenSSL's c_rehash
utility.
- npm install
- npm test
- npm publish
- cd top
- npm publish
Uses node-forge and node-ffi.
See also OpenSSL::Win::Root.