> On 3 Apr 2019, at 04:39, Vandenburgh, Steve Y 
> <steve.vandenbu...@centurylink.com> wrote:
> 
> Believe that you may need the "T" trust setting on the CA certificate too:
> 
> certutil
> -t trustargs
>           Specify the trust attributes to modify in an existing certificate
>           or to apply to a certificate when creating it or adding it to a
>           database. There are three available trust categories for each
>           certificate, expressed in the order SSL, email, object signing for
>           each trust setting. In each category position, use none, any, or
>           all of the attribute codes:
> 
>           ·   p - Valid peer
> 
>           ·   P - Trusted peer (implies p)
> 
>           ·   c - Valid CA
> 
>           ·   C - Trusted CA (implies c)
> 
>           ·   T - trusted CA for client authentication (ssl server only)

I think you are correct here Steve,

The other place to check is cn=encryption,cn=config, I think there is 
nsClientAuth (?) or similar, which should be to “allowed” rather than “never”. 
I don’t have the documentation in front of me this very second, but it’s worth 
checking that too.

—
Sincerely,

William Brown

Senior Software Engineer, 389 Directory Server
SUSE Labs
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