SSL query
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@Dashrender said in SSL query:
@JaredBusch said in SSL query:
Then you can make a new subdomain for one of them such as PBX in this example.
This is a host name, not a subdomain. A subdomain would be like Omaha.nebraska.com where Omaha is a subdomain that has its own hosts listed, i.e. dodge.omaha.nebraska.com where dodge is the host name.
What's the difference? It's both a subdomain and a hostname.
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@scottalanmiller said in SSL query:
@Dashrender said in SSL query:
@JaredBusch said in SSL query:
Then you can make a new subdomain for one of them such as PBX in this example.
This is a host name, not a subdomain. A subdomain would be like Omaha.nebraska.com where Omaha is a subdomain that has its own hosts listed, i.e. dodge.omaha.nebraska.com where dodge is the host name.
What's the difference? It's both a subdomain and a hostname.
Well I was going to ask if in my example Omaha. nebraska.com could point to an IP, but then I thought about that, and yes... I know that nebraska.com can point to an IP, soooo why not omaha.nebraska.com?
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It is not possible to use ssl Certificate in your Local area networks from 1st November 2015. For more detail information you can read here http://www.symantec.com/connect/blogs/important-changes-ssl-certificates-intranets-what-you-need-know.
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I'm still unsure why companies will no longer issue certs for .local domains. It seems to me that complicates things for those of us who are stuck with them for a while longer.
What I've heard some folks wanting to do is make their internal domains something like int.mydomain.com, which isn't really all that terrible... but it can complicate things if you want to use an external web host that expects some level of control over DNS.
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I'm still unsure why companies will no longer issue certs for .local domains. It seems to me that complicates things for those of us who are stuck with them for a while longer.
What I've heard some folks wanting to do is make their internal domains something like int.mydomain.com, which isn't really all that terrible... but it can complicate things if you want to use an external web host that expects some level of control over DNS.
Since they don't work on the internet, why do you need a CA to issue it? Stand up your own internal CA, publish the root via GP to your clients and go to town.