That command is not present, but package "ca-certificates-java" is
installed.

No idea... We can leave it, unless you want a(nother) Linux build
verification.

On Fri, Jul 24, 2015 at 6:34 PM, Niclas Hedhman <nic...@hedhman.org> wrote:

>
> Only use apt-get
>
> On Fri, Jul 24, 2015 at 6:17 PM, Paul Merlin <p...@nosphere.org> wrote:
>
>> Niclas Hedhman a écrit :
>> > I ran as suggested, and put the output here;
>> > https://gist.github.com/niclash/9ee4e5c2e1f97e2e7dee
>> >
>> > So, this box is a rented server, with more or less a default Debian
>> install
>> > and everything running on it has been via Docker containers, so the
>> > original environment is pretty clean, and except for a handful of these
>> > kinds of tests and builds, nothing has run there.
>> So:
>>
>> trustStore is: No File Available, using empty keystore.
>>
>>
>> https://gist.github.com/niclash/9ee4e5c2e1f97e2e7dee#file-sslproblem-bash-L8
>>
>> Looks like your java installation as NO truststore and can't trust anyone
>> :)
>>
>> How did you install your JDK? debian package, webupd8 apt sources,
>> manually ?
>>
>> Could you please retry after doing : `update-ca-certificates -f`.
>>
>> /Paul
>>
>>
>>
>
>
> --
> Niclas Hedhman, Software Developer
> http://zest.apache.org - New Energy for Java
>



-- 
Niclas Hedhman, Software Developer
http://zest.apache.org - New Energy for Java

Reply via email to