Certificates; Trustpoints - Motorola AP-6511 Reference Manual

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13.3.13 Certificates

Access Point Statistics
The Secure Socket Layer (SSL) protocol ensures secure transactions between Web servers and browsers.
SSL uses a third-party certificate authority to identify one (or both) ends of a transaction. A browser checks
the certificate issued by the server before establishing a connection.
This screen is partitioned into the following:

Trustpoints

RSA Keys
13.3.13.1 Trustpoints
Certificates
Each certificate is digitally signed by a trustpoint. The trustpoint signing the certificate can be a certificate
authority, corporate or individual. A trustpoint represents a CA/identity pair containing the identity of the CA,
CA-specific configuration parameters and an association with an enrolled identity certificate.
1. Select the
Statistics
2. Select the
System
3. Expand the Certificates menu to display its submenu items.
4. Select Trustpoint.
When a DHCP server allocates an address for a DHCP client, the client is
assigned a lease (which expires after a designated interval defined by the
administrator). The lease time is the time an IP address is reserved for re-
connection after its last use. Using very short leases, DHCP can dynamically
reconfigure networks in which there are more computers than there are
available IP addresses. This is useful, for example, in education and customer
environments where client users change frequently. Use longer leases if
there are fewer users.
Displays the time the server was last updated.
menu from the Web UI.
tab and then select the
Access Point
node.
Statistics
13-55

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