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KNIFE-SSL-FETCH(1) knife ssl fetch KNIFE-SSL-FETCH(1)

NAME

knife-ssl-fetch - The man page for the knife ssl fetch subcommand.

The knife ssl fetch subcommand is used to copy SSL certificates from an HTTPS server to the trusted_certs_dir directory that is used by knife and the chef-client to store trusted SSL certificates. When these certificates match the hostname of the remote server, running knife ssl fetch is the only step required to verify a remote server that is accessed by either knife or the chef-client.

WARNING:

It is the user's responsibility to verify the authenticity of every SSL certificate before downloading it to the trusted_certs_dir directory. knife will use any certificate in that directory as if it is a 100% trusted and authentic SSL certificate. knife will not be able to determine if any certificate in this directory has been tampered with, is forged, malicious, or otherwise harmful. Therefore it is essential that users take the proper steps before downloading certificates into this directory.


Syntax

This subcommand has the following syntax:

$ knife ssl fetch URI_FOR_HTTPS_SERVER


Options

This subcommand has the following options:

The attribute that is used when opening the SSH connection. The default attribute is the FQDN of the host. Other possible values include a public IP address, a private IP address, or a hostname.
Use to enable SSH agent forwarding.
The configuration file to use.
The number of allowed concurrent connections.
The port on which chef-zero will listen.
--[no-]color
Use to view colored output.
Use to prevent the $EDITOR from being opened and to accept data as-is.
Use to have knife use the default value instead of asking a user to provide one.
The $EDITOR that is used for all interactive commands.
The name of the environment. When this option is added to a command, the command will run only against the named environment.
The output format: summary (default), text, json, yaml, and pp.
The SSH tunnel or gateway that is used to run a bootstrap action on a machine that is not accessible from the workstation.
Shows help for the command.
The SSH identity file used for authentication. Key-based authentication is recommended.
The private key that knife will use to sign requests made by the API client to the Chef server.
Use to define a search query as a space-separated list of servers. If there is more than one item in the list, put quotes around the entire list. For example: --manual-list "server01 server 02 server 03"
--[no-]host-key-verify
Use --no-host-key-verify to disable host key verification. Default setting: --host-key-verify.
The shell type. Possible values: interactive, screen, tmux, macterm, or cssh. (csshx is deprecated in favor of cssh.)
The SSH port.
The SSH password. This can be used to pass the password directly on the command line. If this option is not specified (and a password is required) knife will prompt for the password.
Use to show data after a destructive operation.
The URL for the Chef server.
The search query used to return a list of servers to be accessed using SSH and the specified SSH_COMMAND. This option uses the same syntax as the search sub-command.
The command that will be run against the results of a search query.
The user name used by knife to sign requests made by the API client to the Chef server. Authentication will fail if the user name does not match the private key.
The version of the chef-client.
Set for more verbose outputs. Use -VV for maximum verbosity.
The SSH user name.
Use to respond to all confirmation prompts with "Yes". knife will not ask for confirmation.
Use to run the chef-client in local mode. This allows all commands that work against the Chef server to also work against the local chef-repo.

Examples

The following examples show how to use this knife subcommand:

Fetch the SSL certificates used by Knife from the Chef server

$ knife ssl fetch


Fetch the SSL certificates used by the chef-client from the Chef server

$ knife ssl fetch -c /etc/chef/client.rb


Fetch SSL certificates from a URL or URI

$ knife ssl fetch URL_or_URI


for example:

$ knife ssl fetch https://www.getchef.com


AUTHOR

Chef

Chef 12.0