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Product Name

CIS-CAT Pro Dashboard

Product Version

3.0.0+

Date



CIS-CAT Pro Dashboard v3 supports the following two file types / formats for organizational certificates:

Below are some potential challenges encountered when applying these to the application, and suggested solutions.


Frequently Asked Questions

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My certificate is not in .p12 or .jks format, how do I proceed?

If your current certificate format file includes a Private Key, you may be able to convert it into a .p12 / .jks fileformat, and several guides and tools to do so can be found online. As the CIS Product Support team cannot assist with organizational certificate conversions or any resulting errors, please contact your certificate provider (such as DigiCert) or your certificate administrator if you require further assistance.


How do I identify the “Alias” of my Organizational Certificate?

The certificate Alias can be shown using the Java keytool, which is installed by default with any JRE/JDK, and a copy of which can be found in the Dashboard \jre\bin\ directory. Run the following command from an elevated command prompt:

keytool -v -list -keystore C:\certs\mycert.jks
(where C:\certs\mycert.jks is the path to your .p12 or .jks certificate)

The output will show the Alias under “Alias name”:

In this example, the Alias name is “db31cert”.

Info

Java Keystore can have multiple Aliases contained in a single file. Ensure you are using the correct Alias matching your intended certificate.


Chrome displays “Not Secure” and returns an “ERR_CERT_COMMON_NAME_INVALID“ or “Subject Alternative Name Missing“ Error

The ERR_CERT_COMMON_NAME_INVALID SSL error can occur with a valid and non-expired certificate if it does not contain a SAN (Subject Alternative Name), which Google Chrome requires for all newer browser versions.

The DigiCert page linked below includes further details on this record:
https://www.digicert.com/faq/subject-alternative-name.htm

You can view the certificate rejection cause by opening your Dashboard webpage in Chrome, then accessing Developer Tools (Control + Shift + i on Windows) and selecting the "Security" tab.


Importing a .p12 Certificate to the Java Trust Store returns “Not an X.509 Certificate“

This error can occur if the .p12 file is encrypted, and its content cannot be read without supplying the password or passphrase. To have the Java keytool prompt you for the source keystore password, use the following command:

Code Block
keytool -v -importkeystore -srckeystore C:\certs\mycert.p12 -srcstoretype PKCS12 -destkeystore "C:\Program Files\CCPD\jre\lib\security\cacerts" -deststoretype JKS
  • -srckeystore is the path to your .p12 certificate to be imported (in this example, C:\certs\mycert.p12)

  • -destkeystore is the path to your Dashboard cacerts keystore, found in \jre\lib\security\

This command will prompt for the destination Dashboard keystore password (which is changeit), followed by your source keystore password.


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