In the future, please bottom post to the mailing list. It makes it much easier to read.

Here's a great article on how to see if the modulus on the private key and the modulus on the certificate match.

http://kb.wisc.edu/middleware/page.php?id=4064

You may also want to read the openssl man pages.




On 11/16/2009 07:46 PM, sieger...@gmail.com wrote:
Thanks.what kind of changes do I need to make to the modules. I assume that is what you referred to by 'modulus matches on the private key and certificate file' If you can shine some light on thus 'modulus matches on the private key and certificate file'
Thx
Sam

On Mon, Nov 16, 2009 at 2:27 PM, Crypto Sal <crypto....@gmail.com <mailto:crypto....@gmail.com>> wrote:

    On 11/16/2009 03:48 PM, sieger...@gmail.com
    <mailto:sieger...@gmail.com> wrote:
    Thank you friends. This SSL stuff drives me nuts .
    Just to clarify, I had sent a certificate request with
    xyz.abc.com <http://cmsevalspry.house.gov/> as the common name. I
    got back a certificate with *.abc.com <http://abc.com>  as the
    common name from the CA. Can I still use the same key or is it a
    mismatch?

    Hello,

    As long as the modulus matches on the private key and certificate
    file, yes it will still work.



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