I have been reading HOWTOs all over the internet trying to figure out
how to generate a self-signed and/or CA (mine) signed certificate.
What I can't understand is, WHY do I need an RSA "key" or certificate.
I think it's a key. WHY do I need a PEM certificate, and why a DER
certificate?
No wh
Well, your question was "who i must do request for..." that's why we gave
you links for outside CAs.
If you are dealing with your own CA, then using a wildcard character in
the DN will do the job.
--
Mounir IDRASSI
IDRIX
http://www.idrix.fr
> Le vendredi 23 juillet 2010 22:06:44, Kyle Hamilton a
Yes set the Common Name field to *.yourdomain.com
On Sat, Jul 24, 2010 at 2:45 AM, Luis Daniel Lucio Quiroz <
luis.daniel.lu...@gmail.com> wrote:
> Le vendredi 23 juillet 2010 22:06:44, Kyle Hamilton a écrit :
> > There's a company called StartCom (http://www.startssl.com/) who will
> > do 2-yea
So what i should do to avoid warnings?
CN (some-iLO-2-Subsystem-Name) is included in certificate request, witch is
automatically generated by device. I can't upload other certificate (with
other CN) because i got alert that certificate doesn't match the request.
Is possible to access device via
> I generated the ssl request, I signed it in my CA (openssl) and
> uploaded
> signed certificate back to device.
> I generated also ca.der and uploaded it to my Internet browser. When I
> trying open ilo my browser give a warning about a mismatched hostname.
>
> I'm accessing this device via IP a
Le vendredi 23 juillet 2010 22:06:44, Kyle Hamilton a écrit :
> There's a company called StartCom (http://www.startssl.com/) who will
> do 2-year validity wildcard certs, upon verification of your identity
> and verification that you have control of the domain for which you are
> requesting certif