curl-w32/docs/mk-ca-bundle.md

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---
c: Copyright (C) Daniel Stenberg, <daniel.se>, et al.
SPDX-License-Identifier: curl
Title: mk-ca-bundle
Section: 1
Source: mk-ca-bundle
See-also:
- curl (1)
---
# NAME
mk-ca-bundle - convert Mozilla's certificate bundle to PEM format
# SYNOPSIS
mk-ca-bundle [options]
*[outputfile]*
# DESCRIPTION
The mk-ca-bundle tool downloads the *certdata.txt* file from Mozilla's source
tree over HTTPS, then parses *certdata.txt* and extracts certificates into PEM
format. By default, only CA root certificates trusted to issue SSL server
authentication certificates are extracted. These are then processed with the
OpenSSL command line tool to produce the final ca-bundle file.
The default *outputfile* name is **ca-bundle.crt**. By setting it to '-' (a
single dash) you will get the output sent to STDOUT instead of a file.
The PEM format this scripts uses for output makes the result readily available
for use by just about all OpenSSL or GnuTLS powered applications, such as curl
and others.
# OPTIONS
The following options are supported:
## -b
backup an existing version of *outputfilename*
## -d [name]
specify which Mozilla tree to pull *certdata.txt* from (or a custom
URL). Valid names are: aurora, beta, central, Mozilla, nss, release
(default). They are shortcuts for which source tree to get the certificates
data from.
## -f
force rebuild even if *certdata.txt* is current (Added in version 1.17)
## -i
print version info about used modules
## -k
Allow insecure data transfer. By default (since 1.27) this command will fail
if the HTTPS transfer fails. This overrides that decision (and opens for
man-in-the-middle attacks).
## -l
print license info about *certdata.txt*
## -m
(Added in 1.26) Include meta data comments in the output. The meta data is
specific information about each certificate that is stored in the original
file as comments and using this option will make those comments get passed on
to the output file. The meta data is not parsed in any way by mk-ca-bundle.
## -n
no download of *certdata.txt* (to use existing)
## -p [purposes]:[levels]
list of Mozilla trust purposes and levels for certificates to include in
output. Takes the form of a comma separated list of purposes, a colon, and a
comma separated list of levels. The default is to include all certificates
trusted to issue SSL Server certificates (*SERVER_AUTH:TRUSTED_DELEGATOR*).
Valid purposes are: *ALL*, *DIGITAL_SIGNATURE*, *NON_REPUDIATION*,
*KEY_ENCIPHERMENT*, *DATA_ENCIPHERMENT*, *KEY_AGREEMENT*, *KEY_CERT_SIGN*,
*CRL_SIGN*, *SERVER_AUTH* (default), *CLIENT_AUTH*, *CODE_SIGNING*,
*EMAIL_PROTECTION*, *IPSEC_END_SYSTEM*, *IPSEC_TUNNEL*, *IPSEC_USER*,
*TIME_STAMPING*, *STEP_UP_APPROVED*
Valid trust levels are: *ALL*, *TRUSTED_DELEGATOR* (default), *NOT_TRUSTED*,
*MUST_VERIFY_TRUST*, *TRUSTED*
## -q
be really quiet (no progress output at all)
## -t
include plain text listing of certificates
## -s [algorithms]
comma separated list of signature algorithms with which to hash/fingerprint
each certificate and output when run in plain text mode.
Valid algorithms are:
ALL, NONE, MD5 (default), SHA1, SHA256, SHA384, SHA512
## -u
unlink (remove) *certdata.txt* after processing
## -v
be verbose and print out processed certificate authorities
# EXIT STATUS
Returns 0 on success. Returns 1 if it fails to download data.
# FILE FORMAT
The file format used by Mozilla for this trust information is documented here:
~~~c
https://p11-glue.freedesktop.org/doc/storing-trust-policy/storing-trust-existing.html
~~~