Mark H. Wood wrote:
As already pointed out, there's your problem. To identify a networked
service, the value of CN should be the FQDN of the host providing the
service. (This is why people suddenly became interested in securing
DNS: we are relying on it to validate certificate bindings to serv
On Thu, Jan 12, 2012 at 09:14:28AM -0800, James Lampert wrote:
> Scenario:
>
> I created a self-signed certificate for the box I was testing:
> CN = James Lampert
As already pointed out, there's your problem. To identify a networked
service, the value of CN should be the FQDN of the host providi
I created a self-signed certificate for the box I was testing:
CN = James Lampert
Pid * wrote:
The Common Name must match the domain name of the server as seen by the client.
Hmm. So where Keytool asks
What is your first and last name?
you answer not with what it's asking for, but with the
On 12 Jan 2012, at 17:15, James Lampert wrote:
> Scenario:
>
> I created a self-signed certificate for the box I was testing:
> CN = James Lampert
> OU = Development Lab
> O = Touchtone Corporation
> L = Costa Mesa
> ST = California
> C = US
>
> I then installed it into the Tomcat server on that