Chapter 18 Certificates
NWA-3500/NWA-3550 User’s Guide
208
18.3 What You Need To Know
A Certification Authority (CA) issues certificates and guarantees the identity of
each certificate owner. There are commercial certification authorities like
CyberTrust or VeriSign and government certification authorities. Note that the
NWA also trusts any valid certificate signed by any of the imported trusted CA
certificates. You can use the NWA to generate certification requests that contain
identifying information and public keys and then send the certification requests to
a certification authority.
The NWA only has to store the certificates of the certification authorities that you
decide to trust, no matter how many devices you need to authenticate.
Certificates are based on public-private key pairs. Key distribution is simple and
very secure since you can freely distribute public keys and you never need to
transmit private keys.
The certification authority certificate that you want to import has to be in one of
these file formats:
•
Binary X.509
: This is an ITU-T recommendation that defines the formats for
X.509 certificates.
•
PEM (Base-64) encoded X.509
: This Privacy Enhanced Mail format uses 64
ASCII characters to convert a binary X.509 certificate into a printable form.
•
Binary PKCS#7
: This is a standard that defines the general syntax for data
(including digital signatures) that may be encrypted. The NWA currently allows
the importation of a PKS#7 file that contains a single certificate.
•
PEM (Base-64) encoded PKCS#7
: This Privacy Enhanced Mail (PEM) format
uses 64 ASCII characters to convert a binary PKCS#7 certificate into a printable
form.
You can have the NWA act as a certification authority and sign its own certificates.
See
for details on how to apply this.
18.4 My Certificates Screen
Use this screen to view the NWA’s summary of certificates and certification
requests. Click
Certificates
>
My Certificates
. The following screen displays.
Summary of Contents for 802.11a/g Wireless CardBus Card ZyXEL AG-120
Page 2: ......
Page 8: ...Safety Warnings NWA 3500 NWA 3550 User s Guide 8...
Page 10: ...Contents Overview NWA 3500 NWA 3550 User s Guide 10...
Page 20: ...Table of Contents NWA 3500 NWA 3550 User s Guide 20...
Page 22: ...22...
Page 34: ...Chapter 1 Introducing the NWA NWA 3500 NWA 3550 User s Guide 34...
Page 52: ...Chapter 4 Management Mode NWA 3500 NWA 3550 User s Guide 52...
Page 108: ...108...
Page 146: ...Chapter 9 SSID Screen NWA 3500 NWA 3550 User s Guide 146...
Page 160: ...Chapter 10 Wireless Security Screen NWA 3500 NWA 3550 User s Guide 160...
Page 178: ...Chapter 14 IP Screen NWA 3500 NWA 3550 User s Guide 178...
Page 186: ...Chapter 15 Rogue AP Detection NWA 3500 NWA 3550 User s Guide 186...
Page 198: ...Chapter 16 Remote Management Screens NWA 3500 NWA 3550 User s Guide 198...
Page 260: ...Chapter 21 Load Balancing NWA 3160 Series User s Guide 260...
Page 264: ...Chapter 22 Dynamic Channel Selection NWA 3160 Series User s Guide 264...
Page 276: ...Chapter 23 Maintenance NWA 3500 NWA 3550 User s Guide 276...
Page 277: ...277 PART III Troubleshooting and Specifications Troubleshooting 279 Product Specifications 285...
Page 278: ...278...
Page 284: ...Chapter 24 Troubleshooting NWA 3500 NWA 3550 User s Guide 284...
Page 292: ...292...
Page 368: ...Appendix D Importing Certificates NWA 3500 NWA 3550 User s Guide 368...
Page 386: ...Appendix F Text File Based Auto Configuration NWA 3500 NWA 3550 User s Guide 386...