Yeah -- So what I did is drop cacert.asc under /tmp/ldap/certs for testing
purposes. I then added a line "TLS_CACERTDIR /tmp/ldap/certs" to
/etc/openldap/ldap.conf. The logs on the directory server (and from adding
a -d 1 option to ldapsearch) indicated that the client was rejecting the
certificate. So I used certutil with cacert.asc to create the cert8.db and
key3.db files under /tmp/ldap/certs (I now have cacert.asc, cert8.db,
key3.db, and secmod.db under that directory). Same result. Then I went
back to /etc/openldap/ldap.conf and set "TLS_REQCERT never", and commented
out the cacertdir directive. With that configuration, ldapsearch works
with the -ZZ options. So for some reason, it isn't liking my CA cert, and
I'm not sure why.
On Thu, Sep 27, 2012 at 9:46 PM, Grzegorz Dwornicki <gd1100(a)gmail.com>wrote:
Did you install ca.cert on system and setup /etc/openldap/ldap.conf
?
Greg.
28 wrz 2012 05:11, "Kyle Flavin" <kyle.flavin(a)gmail.com> napisał(a):
> Hi, I've been struggling to setup 389 Directory server with Start TLS.
>
> I have a multi-master replication working with four server. From an
> external client running openldap's ldapsearch, I'm trying to do the
> following:
>
> ldapsearch -ZZ -x -h "myserver" -b "dc=example,dc=com" -D
"cn=Directory
> Manager" -W ""
>
> I get an unsupported protocol error on servers that do not have
> certificates installed.
>
> In an attempt to resolve this, I tried to install a self-signed cert. I
> created a ca.cert and a server.crt, and imported them into the Directory
> Server. I then imported the ca.cert to the admin server. When I attempted
> to import the same server.crt to the admin server, I got an error message
> stating the certificate was for another host. Since the admin server and
> directory server reside on the same host, if I generate a new request, it
> will have an identical host name (I'm not sure if that's relevant to my
> issue). After all of that, I now receive a "Connect Error
> SSL3_GET_SERVER_CERTIFICATE:certificate verify failed". I'm guessing I
> need to import the root cert onto the client somehow, but I'm not sure how
> to go about doing that.
>
> This has become pretty time consuming, so I was hoping that someone more
> knowledgeable could confirm that I'm at least travelling down the right
> path. I've been following this Red Hat document:
>
>
>
https://access.redhat.com/knowledge/docs/en-US/Red_Hat_Directory_Server/9...
>
> Thanks,
> Kyle
>
>
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>
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>
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