%aptent; %aptverbatiment; %aptvendor; ]> &apt-author.team; &apt-email; &apt-product; 2017-11-22T00:00:00Z apt-transport-https 1 APT apt-transport-https APT transport for downloading via the HTTP Secure protocol (HTTPS) Description This APT transport allows the use of repositories accessed via the HTTP Secure protocol (HTTPS) also referred to as HTTP over TLS. It is available by default since apt 1.5 and was before that available in a apt-transport-https package. Note that a transport is never called directly by a user but used by APT tools based on user configuration. HTTP is by itself an unencrypted transport protocol (compare &apt-transport-http;), which, as indicated by the appended S is wrapped in an encrypted layer known as Transport Layer Security (TLS) which provides end-to-end encryption. A sufficiently capable attacker can still observe the communication partners and deeper analyse of the encrypted communcation might still reveal important details. An overview over available alternative transport methods is given in &sources-list;. Options The HTTPS protocol is based on the HTTP protocol and as such this implementation has the same relation meaning that all options supported by &apt-transport-http; are also available via Acquire::https and will default to the same values specified for Acquire::http. This manpage will only document the options unique to https. Server credentials By default all certificates trusted by the system (see ca-certificates package) are used for the verification of the server certificate. An alternative certificate authority (CA) can be configured with the Acquire::https::CAInfo option and its host-specific option Acquire::https::CAInfo::host. The option specifies a file is made of the concatenation of the CA certificates (in PEM format) creating the chain used for the verification of the path from the root (self signed one). If the remote server provides the whole chain during the exchange, the file need only contain the root certificate. Otherwise, the whole chain is required. If you need to support multiple authorities, the only way is to concatenate everything. A custom certificate revocation list (CRL) can be configured with the options Acquire::https::CRLFile and Acquire::https::CRLFile::host respectively. Like the previous option a file in PEM format needs to be specified. Disabling security When authenticating the server, if the certificate verification fails for some reason (expired, revoked, man in the middle, …), the connection fails. This is obviously what you want in all cases and what the default value (true) of the option Acquire::https::Verify-Peer and its host-specific variant provides. If you know exactly what you are doing, setting this option to "false" allows you to skip peer certificate verification and make the exchange succeed. Again, this option is for debugging or testing purpose only as it removes all security provided by the use of HTTPS. Similarly the option Acquire::https::Verify-Host and its host-specific variant can be used to deactivate a security feature: The certificate provided by the server includes the identity of the server which should match the DNS name used to access it. By default, as requested by RFC 2818, the name of the mirror is checked against the identity found in the certificate. This default behavior is safe and should not be changed, but if you know that the server you are using has a DNS name which does not match the identity in its certificate, you can set the option to "false", which will prevent the comparison to be done. Client authentication Beside the password based authentication available (see &apt-authconf;) HTTPS supports authentication based on client certificates as well via Acquire::https::SSLCert and Acquire::https::SSLKey. They respectively should be set to the filename of the X.509 client certificate and the associated (unencrypted) private key, both in PEM format. In practice the use of the host-specific variants of both options is highly recommended. Examples Acquire::https { Proxy::example.org "DIRECT"; Proxy "socks5h://apt:pass@localhost:9050"; Proxy-Auto-Detect "/usr/local/bin/apt-https-proxy-auto-detect"; No-Cache "true"; Max-Age "3600"; No-Store "true"; Timeout "10"; Dl-Limit "42"; Pipeline-Depth "0"; AllowRedirect "false"; User-Agent "My APT-HTTPS"; SendAccept "false"; CAInfo "/path/to/ca/certs.pem"; CRLFile "/path/to/all/crl.pem"; Verify-Peer "true"; Verify-Host::broken.example.org "false"; SSLCert::example.org "/path/to/client/cert.pem"; SSLKey::example.org "/path/to/client/key.pem" }; See Also &apt-transport-http; &apt-conf; &apt-authconf; &sources-list; &manbugs;