Generating A Certificate Signing Request (Csr) - Motorola WiNG 5.7.1 System Reference Manual

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State (ST)
City (L)
Organization (O)
Organizational Unit (OU)
Common Name (CN)
6. Select the following
Email Address
Domain Name
IP Address
7. Select the
Generate Certificate

12.2.4 Generating a Certificate Signing Request (CSR)

Certificates
A certificate signing request (CSR) is a message from a requestor to a certificate authority to apply for a digital identity
certificate. The CSR is composed of a block of encrypted text generated on the server the certificate will be used on. It contains
information included in the certificate, including organization name, common name (domain name), locality and country.
A RSA key must be either created or applied to the certificate request before the certificate can be generated. A private key is
not included in the CSR, but is used to digitally sign the completed request. The certificate created with a particular CSR only
worked with the private key generated with it. If the private key is lost, the certificate is no longer functional. The CSR can be
accompanied by other identity credentials required by the certificate authority, and the certificate authority maintains the right
to contact the applicant for additional information.
If the request is successful, the CA sends an identity certificate digitally signed with the private key of the CA.
To create a CSR:
1. Select
Operations.
2. Select Certificates.
3. Select
Create CSR.
Enter a State/Prov. for the state or province name used in the certificate. This is a required
field.
Enter a City to represent the city name used in the certificate. This is a required field.
Define an Organization for the organization used in the certificate. This is a required field.
Enter an Organizational Unit for the name of the organization unit used in the certificate.
This is a required field.
If there is a common name (IP address) for the organizational unit issuing the certificate,
enter it here.
Additional Credentials
required for the generation of the self signed certificate:
Provide an E-mail address used as the contact address for issues relating to this certificate
request.
Enter a fully qualified domain name (FQDN) is an unambiguous domain name that specifies
the node's position in the DNS tree hierarchy absolutely. To distinguish an FQDN from a
regular domain name, a trailing period is added. A FQDN differs from a regular domain
name by its absoluteness; as a suffix is not added.
Specify the IP address used as the destination for certificate requests.
button at the bottom of the Create Certificate screen to produce the certificate.
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