There's no *requirement* in X.509 to have the host name in the CN. As a matter
of fact, there are X.509v3 extensions that are better suited for this purpose.

Closing ticket.

On Wed Aug 31 07:03:17 2011, dtauerb...@gmail.com wrote:
> Hi,
>
> This is just a minor thing that always bugs me whenever I install openssl;
> by default the openssl configuration file (/etc/ssl/openssl.cnf) has the
> following line:
>
> "commonName = Common Name (eg, YOUR name)"
>
> Sometimes when I'm installing a certificate I accidentally forget to write
> my host name given this prompt (as I just did a few minutes ago). I'd
> suggest
>
> "commonName = Common Name (your host name)"
>
> since the X.509 format of course requires the CN to be the host. I suspect
> this default configuration file is being copied from apps/openssl.cnf,
> though I confess this is just based on a diff without looking too closely.
> This is of course very minor, but an easy change so I hope you'll consider
> it to save lots of future idiots like me 30 seconds.
>
> (I am running Ubuntu 10.04 (old!) at the moment, and peeked at the source
> code from the openssl-fips-1.2.3.tar.gz tarball.)
>
> Thanks,
> Dan


--
Richard Levitte
levi...@openssl.org

-- 
Ticket here: http://rt.openssl.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=2590
Please log in as guest with password guest if prompted

-- 
openssl-dev mailing list
To unsubscribe: https://mta.openssl.org/mailman/listinfo/openssl-dev

Reply via email to