Next: Переключатель службы имен, Previous: Privileged Programs, Up: Настройка системы [Contents][Index]
Web servers available over HTTPS (that is, HTTP over the transport-layer security mechanism, TLS) send client programs an X.509 certificate that the client can then use to authenticate the server. To do that, clients verify that the server’s certificate is signed by a so-called certificate authority (CA). But to verify the CA’s signature, clients must have first acquired the CA’s certificate.
Web browsers such as GNU IceCat include their own set of CA certificates, such that they are able to verify CA signatures out-of-the-box.
However, most other programs that can talk HTTPS—wget
,
git
, w3m
, etc.—need to be told where CA certificates
can be found.
For users of Guix System, this is done by adding a package that provides
certificates to the packages
field of the operating-system
declaration (see operating-system
Reference). Guix includes one such
package, nss-certs
, which is a set of CA certificates provided as
part of Mozilla’s Network Security Services.
This package is part of %base-packages
, so there is no need to
explicitly add it. The /etc/ssl/certs directory, which is where most
applications and libraries look for certificates by default, points to the
certificates installed globally.
Unprivileged users, including users of Guix on a foreign distro, can also
install their own certificate package in their profile. A number of
environment variables need to be defined so that applications and libraries
know where to find them. Namely, the OpenSSL library honors the
SSL_CERT_DIR
and SSL_CERT_FILE
variables. Some applications add
their own environment variables; for instance, the Git version control
system honors the certificate bundle pointed to by the GIT_SSL_CAINFO
environment variable. Thus, you would typically run something like:
guix install nss-certs export SSL_CERT_DIR="$HOME/.guix-profile/etc/ssl/certs" export SSL_CERT_FILE="$HOME/.guix-profile/etc/ssl/certs/ca-certificates.crt" export GIT_SSL_CAINFO="$SSL_CERT_FILE"
As another example, R requires the CURL_CA_BUNDLE
environment variable
to point to a certificate bundle, so you would have to run something like
this:
$ guix install glibc-locales $ export GUIX_LOCPATH=$HOME/.guix-profile/lib/locale
For other applications you may want to look up the required environment variable in the relevant documentation.
Next: Переключатель службы имен, Previous: Privileged Programs, Up: Настройка системы [Contents][Index]