* Kyle Hamilton wrote on Fri, Jul 23, 2010 at 20:06 -0700:
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 certificates.
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
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-year
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
Hi,
All major commercial CAs do provide wildcard SSL certificates and the
price is usually high.
Googling gives the following links for Comodo, Thawte and Verisign :
- http://www.comodo.com/e-commerce/ssl-certificates/wildcard-ssl.php
-
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 certificates.
Oh, and they're included in the latest Microsoft Root
John Nagle schrieb:
Question: Is a certificate for *.example.com considered valid for
example.com?
OpenSSL seems to say no, but Firefox 2 says yes. Try
https://stanford.edu; for a test.
IIRC OpenSSL does not accept wildcards at all in s_client. The library
itself does not make any decision