Renewing Self-Signed SSL Certificates
An expired certificate can cause network communication issues between holders of encryption and de-encryption key pairs, which in this case come from the computers and the IBM® BigFix server. Therefore, renewing expired certificates ensures a secure and continuous connection with the trusted root.
About this task
A Secure Socket Layer (SSL) certificate is, by default, generated automatically during the configuration of the Software Distribution Self Service Portal (SSP). These SSL certificates are self-signed and must be installed on the computers before they can be managed.
Self-signed
SSL certificates (ssl.cert
) are verified by the Certificate
Authority (CA) certificates (ca.cert
), which are
generated during the configuration of the management extender. Therefore,
an expired CA certificate can result to computers not being able to
validate messages from its trusted source. End users must download
an updated CA certificate.
Deploying a new CA certificate requires end user involvement. If you deploy an action that contains the new CA, the computer still will not recognize it after the original CA expires because it depends on the (now expiring) CA. The only way to avoid continued user involvement is by using officially signed SSL certificates.