Versions Compared

Key

  • This line was added.
  • This line was removed.
  • Formatting was changed.

Symptoms

An SSL certificate is necessary for more than just distributing the public key: if it is signed by a trusted third party, it verifies the identity of the server so clients know they aren’t sending their information (encrypted or not) to the wrong person. So what is a self-signed certificate? It is a certificate that is signed by itself rather than a trusted third party. This is not a good idea for most business use cases. You will rarely want to use a self-signed certificate on a public Web server that requires anonymous visitors to connect to your site because they could easily become a victim of a man-in-the-middle attack. There are a limited number of situations in which a self-signed certificate may prove adequate:

...

In other words, when deploying your SoftNAS server into an enterprise use case, it may be required (or at least strongly recommended) that you switch the default self-signed certifications for your own enterprise certifications.

Purpose

This article provides the steps required to provide your own certifications to your SoftNAS instance.

Resolution

If you want to send or receive messages signed by root authorities and these authorities are not installed on the server, you must add a trusted root certificate manually.

...

# systemctl restart nginx

Notes/Additional Info:

  • It is HIGHLY recommended to add the certificates before configuring replication to avoid any SnapReplicate™ interruption, as changing the keys will deactivate replication.
  • In case there is a need to change the keys after configuring SnapReplicate™:

...