On Oct 23, 2012, at 2:48 PM, m.roth@xxxxxxxxx wrote: > aurfalien wrote: >> On Oct 23, 2012, at 1:22 PM, Eero Volotinen wrote: >>> 2012/10/23 aurfalien <aurfalien@xxxxxxxxx>: > <snip> >>>> My scenario; >>>> >>>> I have a wild card SSL installed on one of my CentOS boxes. >>>> >>>> As I understand it, this server was used as a sort of master when >>>> originally generating and receiving the wild card SSL cert (got the >>>> cert from GoDaddy BTW). >>>> >>>> So, now I must export some file(s) from that server so that I can >>>> import it/them to another server. > <snip> >>>> But I honestly do not under stand what I did here and have a feeling >>>> this is incomplete as aren't public and private key involved some how? >>>> >>>> I have my ca.csr (my request file), ca.key (my private key) and ca.pem >>>> (my public key) files in hand and ready. A backup has been made for >>>> testing. >>> >>> Looks like you are a bit lost in ssl-forest. >> >> Ain't that the truth. >> >>> just copy your privatekey >>> and signed cert file to another box and configure apache. that is all >>> that is needed. >> >> Wow, so simple that its complicated :) >> > Did you generate the new files with the correct name of the new server? If > not, people browsing there will see complaints that the key doesn't match > the server name. This is a wild card SSL by the way. When looking at the keys I see; Subject: /O=*.domain.com/OU=Domain Control Validated/CN=*.domain.com Issuer: /C=US/ST=Arizona/L=Scottsdale/O=GoDaddy.com, Inc./OU=http://certificates.godaddy.com/repository/CN=Go Daddy Secure Certification Authority/serialNumber=######## Validation Days: start date - end date Subject Alternative Name: *.domain.com, domain.com I don't see any ref to the servers name that its running on. I removed the serial, domain name and dates. - aurf _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos