Hi Johan,

Can't say for sure for IOS routers, but I would assume that it is case insensitive, as the same certificates are also used on the internet to verify the dns hostname against the server name. And DNS is (fortunately) case insensitive.

so my feeling is that it is case insensitve..

PJ

On 14 sep 2010, at 08:40, Johan Bornman wrote:

Hi,
 
Please see my e-mail below.
 
I am busy with a task (Task 4.2) where certificates are used for authentication. I am trying to determine if the configuration required is case sensitive or not. Does it matter? The DSG has both small-caps and caps lock on. Is it a typo?
 
Thanks
 
Johan
 
From: Kingsley Charles [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: 13 September 2010 08:45 AM
To: Johan Bornman
Cc: OSL Security
Subject: Re: [OSL | CCIE_Security] Certificates
 

I guess so.

With regards
Kings

On Mon, Sep 13, 2010 at 11:57 AM, Johan Bornman <[email protected]> wrote:
Hi,
 
Is there a difference between:
     subject-name cn=R5.ipexpert, ou=CCIE, c=PL
     and
     subject-name cn=r5.ipexpert, ou=CCIE, c=PL
 
Is it case-sensitive?
 
Thanks
 
Johan
 


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