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The same sort of thing happens with the Windows build of OpenSSL, but
for a different core reason: Windows does ship with a stock CA
certificate set, but it's not in a format that OpenSSL understands how
to use. Rather than try to find a way to convert the data format, you
may find it acceptable to use the same Mozilla NSS cert set. I do not
know of a way to easily get this from Mozilla themselves, but I did find
a [https://curl.haxx.se/docs/caextract.html|third party source] for the
<tt>cacert.pem</tt> file. I suggest placing the file into your Windows
user home directory so that you can then point Fossil at it like so:
<pre>
fossil set --global ssl-ca-location %userprofile%\cacert.pem
</pre>
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The same sort of thing happens with the Windows build of OpenSSL, but
for a different core reason: Windows does ship with a stock CA
certificate set, but it's not in a format that OpenSSL understands how
to use. Rather than try to find a way to convert the data format, you
may find it acceptable to use the same Mozilla NSS cert set. I do not
know of a way to easily get this from Mozilla themselves, but I did find
a [https://curl.se/docs/caextract.html | third party source] for the
<tt>cacert.pem</tt> file. I suggest placing the file into your Windows
user home directory so that you can then point Fossil at it like so:
<pre>
fossil set --global ssl-ca-location %userprofile%\cacert.pem
</pre>
|