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Distinguished names – Allied Telesis AT-S62 User Manual

Page 512

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Chapter 27: Public Key Infrastructure Certificates

Section VII: Management Security

512

Public CAs issue certificates typically intended for use by the general
public. Since a certificate for an AT-8524M switch is not intended for
general use, but will only be used by you and other network managers,
you might decide that the switch’s certificate need not be issued by this
type of CA.

Some large companies have private CAs. This is a person or group within
the company given the responsibility of issuing certificates for the
company’s network equipment. The value of a private CA is that the
company can keep track of the certificates and control access to various
network devices.

If your company is large enough, it might have a private CA and you
might want that group to issue any AT-8524M certificates, if for no other
reason than to follow company policy.

To obtain a CA certificate you have to create a key pair. You then need to
generate an digital document called an enrollment request. The request
will contain the public key, along with other information you want the
CA to use to create the certificate.

Before you send an enrollment request to a CA, you should first contact
the CA to determine what other documents or procedures might be
required in order for the CA to create the certificate. This is particularly
important with public CAs, which typically have strict guidelines on
issuing certificates.

Distinguished

Names

Part of the task to creating a self-signed certificate or enrollment request
is selecting a distinguished name. A distinguished name is integrated into
a certificate along with the key. A distinguished name can have up to
five parts. The parts are:

❑ cn - common name

This can be the name of the person who will use the certificate.

❑ ou - organizational unit

This is the name of a department, such as Network Support or IT.

❑ o - organization

This is the name of the company.

❑ st - state

This is the state.

❑ c - country

This is the country