Bryan,

The method of completing "Does openldap provide a mechanism that will 
accomplish the same thing (automatic client cert acceptance)?" is to have a 
real cert authority issue the cert.  They're pretty nice about it even, at 
least if you give them money.

I /highly/ recommend you read up on SSL certs, differences between self-signed 
and purchased, etc.

Here's a hint: Self-Signed aren't trusted anywhere.  Most equipment, browsers, 
etc, come with a list of trusted providers.

Spend a week on SSL/Certs - it'll be worth your time.

- chris

From: [email protected] 
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Bryan Boone
Sent: Wednesday, July 07, 2010 3:07 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Question about LDAP and SSL.

Hi everyone.  I am kinda a noob to OpenLDAP and SSL for that matter.

I am writting a web page that resides on a special piece of proprietary 
hardware (not a PC) that I need authentication for (running linux with apache 
server).  I would like LDAP to be one of the authentication methods (this 
hardware will be a LDAP client) when a customer logs into the web page of my 
device.  Of course I need this to support LDAP with SSL.

I went to the openldap website and found the directions to create and generated 
the SSL certs and installed them in openLDAP (3 total).  There is the server 
cert and key, and then the client cert.

You know how when connecting to a https:// website IE, or firefox will prompt 
you if you want to accept the SSL certificate (if the cert is not signed by a 
CA)?  Does openldap provide a mechanism that will accomplish the same thing 
(automatic client cert acceptance)?  Or will I need to provide a way on my 
hardware where the customer can manualy upload his/her client cert to the 
device?

Does that make sense?

thanks


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