Secure Nifi with SSL
I secure successfully a Nifi Node (localhost) with SSL but I have always a yellow padlock in my browser as you can see in the pic here
Do you have any idea?
Thanks
ssl ssl-certificate apache-nifi
add a comment |
I secure successfully a Nifi Node (localhost) with SSL but I have always a yellow padlock in my browser as you can see in the pic here
Do you have any idea?
Thanks
ssl ssl-certificate apache-nifi
add a comment |
I secure successfully a Nifi Node (localhost) with SSL but I have always a yellow padlock in my browser as you can see in the pic here
Do you have any idea?
Thanks
ssl ssl-certificate apache-nifi
I secure successfully a Nifi Node (localhost) with SSL but I have always a yellow padlock in my browser as you can see in the pic here
Do you have any idea?
Thanks
ssl ssl-certificate apache-nifi
ssl ssl-certificate apache-nifi
asked Nov 12 at 14:06
Z A
32
32
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2 Answers
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If you used a self-signed certificate then this is expected behavior. You would have to purchase a real certificate for a real domain name in order for the browser to not warn you.
Thanks Bryan I've another question please (you can see it here: community.hortonworks.com/questions/226357/…)
– Z A
Nov 13 at 15:13
add a comment |
I see the description below:
Standalone : generates the certificate authority, keystores, truststores, and nifi.properties files in one command
Client/Server mode : uses a Certificate Authority Server that accepts Certificate Signing Requests from clients, signs them, and sends the resulting certificates back. Both client and server validate the other’s identity through a shared secret.
Standalone and client, both generate the certificate authority, keystores, truststores.
Sorry, I don't see the difference.
add a comment |
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2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
If you used a self-signed certificate then this is expected behavior. You would have to purchase a real certificate for a real domain name in order for the browser to not warn you.
Thanks Bryan I've another question please (you can see it here: community.hortonworks.com/questions/226357/…)
– Z A
Nov 13 at 15:13
add a comment |
If you used a self-signed certificate then this is expected behavior. You would have to purchase a real certificate for a real domain name in order for the browser to not warn you.
Thanks Bryan I've another question please (you can see it here: community.hortonworks.com/questions/226357/…)
– Z A
Nov 13 at 15:13
add a comment |
If you used a self-signed certificate then this is expected behavior. You would have to purchase a real certificate for a real domain name in order for the browser to not warn you.
If you used a self-signed certificate then this is expected behavior. You would have to purchase a real certificate for a real domain name in order for the browser to not warn you.
answered Nov 12 at 14:19
Bryan Bende
10.3k917
10.3k917
Thanks Bryan I've another question please (you can see it here: community.hortonworks.com/questions/226357/…)
– Z A
Nov 13 at 15:13
add a comment |
Thanks Bryan I've another question please (you can see it here: community.hortonworks.com/questions/226357/…)
– Z A
Nov 13 at 15:13
Thanks Bryan I've another question please (you can see it here: community.hortonworks.com/questions/226357/…)
– Z A
Nov 13 at 15:13
Thanks Bryan I've another question please (you can see it here: community.hortonworks.com/questions/226357/…)
– Z A
Nov 13 at 15:13
add a comment |
I see the description below:
Standalone : generates the certificate authority, keystores, truststores, and nifi.properties files in one command
Client/Server mode : uses a Certificate Authority Server that accepts Certificate Signing Requests from clients, signs them, and sends the resulting certificates back. Both client and server validate the other’s identity through a shared secret.
Standalone and client, both generate the certificate authority, keystores, truststores.
Sorry, I don't see the difference.
add a comment |
I see the description below:
Standalone : generates the certificate authority, keystores, truststores, and nifi.properties files in one command
Client/Server mode : uses a Certificate Authority Server that accepts Certificate Signing Requests from clients, signs them, and sends the resulting certificates back. Both client and server validate the other’s identity through a shared secret.
Standalone and client, both generate the certificate authority, keystores, truststores.
Sorry, I don't see the difference.
add a comment |
I see the description below:
Standalone : generates the certificate authority, keystores, truststores, and nifi.properties files in one command
Client/Server mode : uses a Certificate Authority Server that accepts Certificate Signing Requests from clients, signs them, and sends the resulting certificates back. Both client and server validate the other’s identity through a shared secret.
Standalone and client, both generate the certificate authority, keystores, truststores.
Sorry, I don't see the difference.
I see the description below:
Standalone : generates the certificate authority, keystores, truststores, and nifi.properties files in one command
Client/Server mode : uses a Certificate Authority Server that accepts Certificate Signing Requests from clients, signs them, and sends the resulting certificates back. Both client and server validate the other’s identity through a shared secret.
Standalone and client, both generate the certificate authority, keystores, truststores.
Sorry, I don't see the difference.
answered Nov 13 at 15:14
Z A
32
32
add a comment |
add a comment |
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