Patrick Georgi has uploaded this change for review. ( https://review.coreboot.org/c/coreboot/+/37599 )
Change subject: Documentation: Describe how to deal with snooping https proxies ......................................................................
Documentation: Describe how to deal with snooping https proxies
Disabling SSL verification is far from optimal, but depending on the circumstances may be the most practical way, so describe how to do that instead of leaving users confused.
It's also not _that_ bad because git's hashing scheme should uncover most attempts to tamper with code, either when checking signed tags or when people push (and see lots of modified commits).
State the command in a way that isn't conductive to careless copy & paste.
Change-Id: Idbd52ba5d6e8b0f0e891fca16e4159ccef10771a Signed-off-by: Patrick Georgi pgeorgi@google.com --- M Documentation/tutorial/part2.md 1 file changed, 10 insertions(+), 0 deletions(-)
git pull ssh://review.coreboot.org:29418/coreboot refs/changes/99/37599/1
diff --git a/Documentation/tutorial/part2.md b/Documentation/tutorial/part2.md index 3009e28..0838fed 100644 --- a/Documentation/tutorial/part2.md +++ b/Documentation/tutorial/part2.md @@ -58,6 +58,16 @@ where YourUserNameHere is your username, and YourPasswordHere is the password you just generated.
+If your system is behind a snooping https proxy, you might also have to +make its SSL certificate known to curl, a system specific operation. +If that's not possible for some reason, you can also disable SSL +certificate verification in git: + + git config [--global] http.sslVerify [true|false] + +The `--global` argument sets it for all git transfers of your local +user, `false` means not to validate the certificate. + ## Part 3: Clone coreboot and configure it for submitting patches
On Gerrit, click on the **Browse** tab in the upper left corner and select