Cannot access GIT behind firewall for MDB dependencies
Following the documentation as instructed, https://mdbootstrap.com/docs/angular/getting-started/quick-start/ (Pro version NPM installation).
I am unable to access the GIT file requested because our company firewall restricts access to the certificate.
Is there a method that could work in my package.json
?
package.json
"dependencies": {
...
"git+https://oauth2:sBBYpBsf-mcbHgYHUFa7@git.mdbootstrap.com/mdb/angular/ng-uikit-pro-standard.git"
},
ERROR for npm install:
npm ERR! Error while executing:
npm ERR! C:Program FilesGitcmdgit.EXE ls-remote -h -t https://oauth2:sBBYpBsf-mcbHgYHUFa7@git.mdbootstrap.com/mdb/angular/ng-uikit-pro-standard.git
npm ERR!
npm ERR! fatal: unable to access 'https://oauth2:sBBYpBsf-mcbHgYHUFa7@git.mdbootstrap.com/mdb/angular/ng-uikit-pro-standard.git/': SSL certificate problem: self signed certificate in certificate chain
npm ERR!
npm ERR! exited with error code: 128
git ssl npm angular-material angular-cli
add a comment |
Following the documentation as instructed, https://mdbootstrap.com/docs/angular/getting-started/quick-start/ (Pro version NPM installation).
I am unable to access the GIT file requested because our company firewall restricts access to the certificate.
Is there a method that could work in my package.json
?
package.json
"dependencies": {
...
"git+https://oauth2:sBBYpBsf-mcbHgYHUFa7@git.mdbootstrap.com/mdb/angular/ng-uikit-pro-standard.git"
},
ERROR for npm install:
npm ERR! Error while executing:
npm ERR! C:Program FilesGitcmdgit.EXE ls-remote -h -t https://oauth2:sBBYpBsf-mcbHgYHUFa7@git.mdbootstrap.com/mdb/angular/ng-uikit-pro-standard.git
npm ERR!
npm ERR! fatal: unable to access 'https://oauth2:sBBYpBsf-mcbHgYHUFa7@git.mdbootstrap.com/mdb/angular/ng-uikit-pro-standard.git/': SSL certificate problem: self signed certificate in certificate chain
npm ERR!
npm ERR! exited with error code: 128
git ssl npm angular-material angular-cli
Hostgit.mdbootstrap.com
is not using a self signed certificate so if this is what you get it means you are under local TLS DPI and some local system is giving you an alternate certificate instead of the true one. You can use gitsslCAinfo
configuration option to specify which CA to trust, in your case you will need to put there the self signed certificate that you get.
– Patrick Mevzek
Nov 20 '18 at 23:21
The only thing I would add to @PatrickMevzek's comment is, I would not make a habit of just adding "whatever cert the software is complaining about" to the trust store. You should probably check with your networking folk to understand what cert(s) should be needed for proper operation behind your proxy.
– Mark Adelsberger
Nov 21 '18 at 0:05
add a comment |
Following the documentation as instructed, https://mdbootstrap.com/docs/angular/getting-started/quick-start/ (Pro version NPM installation).
I am unable to access the GIT file requested because our company firewall restricts access to the certificate.
Is there a method that could work in my package.json
?
package.json
"dependencies": {
...
"git+https://oauth2:sBBYpBsf-mcbHgYHUFa7@git.mdbootstrap.com/mdb/angular/ng-uikit-pro-standard.git"
},
ERROR for npm install:
npm ERR! Error while executing:
npm ERR! C:Program FilesGitcmdgit.EXE ls-remote -h -t https://oauth2:sBBYpBsf-mcbHgYHUFa7@git.mdbootstrap.com/mdb/angular/ng-uikit-pro-standard.git
npm ERR!
npm ERR! fatal: unable to access 'https://oauth2:sBBYpBsf-mcbHgYHUFa7@git.mdbootstrap.com/mdb/angular/ng-uikit-pro-standard.git/': SSL certificate problem: self signed certificate in certificate chain
npm ERR!
npm ERR! exited with error code: 128
git ssl npm angular-material angular-cli
Following the documentation as instructed, https://mdbootstrap.com/docs/angular/getting-started/quick-start/ (Pro version NPM installation).
I am unable to access the GIT file requested because our company firewall restricts access to the certificate.
Is there a method that could work in my package.json
?
package.json
"dependencies": {
...
"git+https://oauth2:sBBYpBsf-mcbHgYHUFa7@git.mdbootstrap.com/mdb/angular/ng-uikit-pro-standard.git"
},
ERROR for npm install:
npm ERR! Error while executing:
npm ERR! C:Program FilesGitcmdgit.EXE ls-remote -h -t https://oauth2:sBBYpBsf-mcbHgYHUFa7@git.mdbootstrap.com/mdb/angular/ng-uikit-pro-standard.git
npm ERR!
npm ERR! fatal: unable to access 'https://oauth2:sBBYpBsf-mcbHgYHUFa7@git.mdbootstrap.com/mdb/angular/ng-uikit-pro-standard.git/': SSL certificate problem: self signed certificate in certificate chain
npm ERR!
npm ERR! exited with error code: 128
git ssl npm angular-material angular-cli
git ssl npm angular-material angular-cli
edited Nov 21 '18 at 19:18
asked Nov 20 '18 at 23:02
simple
94042244
94042244
Hostgit.mdbootstrap.com
is not using a self signed certificate so if this is what you get it means you are under local TLS DPI and some local system is giving you an alternate certificate instead of the true one. You can use gitsslCAinfo
configuration option to specify which CA to trust, in your case you will need to put there the self signed certificate that you get.
– Patrick Mevzek
Nov 20 '18 at 23:21
The only thing I would add to @PatrickMevzek's comment is, I would not make a habit of just adding "whatever cert the software is complaining about" to the trust store. You should probably check with your networking folk to understand what cert(s) should be needed for proper operation behind your proxy.
– Mark Adelsberger
Nov 21 '18 at 0:05
add a comment |
Hostgit.mdbootstrap.com
is not using a self signed certificate so if this is what you get it means you are under local TLS DPI and some local system is giving you an alternate certificate instead of the true one. You can use gitsslCAinfo
configuration option to specify which CA to trust, in your case you will need to put there the self signed certificate that you get.
– Patrick Mevzek
Nov 20 '18 at 23:21
The only thing I would add to @PatrickMevzek's comment is, I would not make a habit of just adding "whatever cert the software is complaining about" to the trust store. You should probably check with your networking folk to understand what cert(s) should be needed for proper operation behind your proxy.
– Mark Adelsberger
Nov 21 '18 at 0:05
Host
git.mdbootstrap.com
is not using a self signed certificate so if this is what you get it means you are under local TLS DPI and some local system is giving you an alternate certificate instead of the true one. You can use git sslCAinfo
configuration option to specify which CA to trust, in your case you will need to put there the self signed certificate that you get.– Patrick Mevzek
Nov 20 '18 at 23:21
Host
git.mdbootstrap.com
is not using a self signed certificate so if this is what you get it means you are under local TLS DPI and some local system is giving you an alternate certificate instead of the true one. You can use git sslCAinfo
configuration option to specify which CA to trust, in your case you will need to put there the self signed certificate that you get.– Patrick Mevzek
Nov 20 '18 at 23:21
The only thing I would add to @PatrickMevzek's comment is, I would not make a habit of just adding "whatever cert the software is complaining about" to the trust store. You should probably check with your networking folk to understand what cert(s) should be needed for proper operation behind your proxy.
– Mark Adelsberger
Nov 21 '18 at 0:05
The only thing I would add to @PatrickMevzek's comment is, I would not make a habit of just adding "whatever cert the software is complaining about" to the trust store. You should probably check with your networking folk to understand what cert(s) should be needed for proper operation behind your proxy.
– Mark Adelsberger
Nov 21 '18 at 0:05
add a comment |
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Host
git.mdbootstrap.com
is not using a self signed certificate so if this is what you get it means you are under local TLS DPI and some local system is giving you an alternate certificate instead of the true one. You can use gitsslCAinfo
configuration option to specify which CA to trust, in your case you will need to put there the self signed certificate that you get.– Patrick Mevzek
Nov 20 '18 at 23:21
The only thing I would add to @PatrickMevzek's comment is, I would not make a habit of just adding "whatever cert the software is complaining about" to the trust store. You should probably check with your networking folk to understand what cert(s) should be needed for proper operation behind your proxy.
– Mark Adelsberger
Nov 21 '18 at 0:05