Secure Nifi with SSL










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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










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    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










    share|improve this question
























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      0







      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










      share|improve this question













      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






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      asked Nov 12 at 14:06









      Z A

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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.






          share|improve this answer




















          • Thanks Bryan I've another question please (you can see it here: community.hortonworks.com/questions/226357/…)
            – Z A
            Nov 13 at 15:13


















          0














          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.






          share|improve this answer




















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            2 Answers
            2






            active

            oldest

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            2 Answers
            2






            active

            oldest

            votes









            active

            oldest

            votes






            active

            oldest

            votes









            1














            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.






            share|improve this answer




















            • Thanks Bryan I've another question please (you can see it here: community.hortonworks.com/questions/226357/…)
              – Z A
              Nov 13 at 15:13















            1














            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.






            share|improve this answer




















            • Thanks Bryan I've another question please (you can see it here: community.hortonworks.com/questions/226357/…)
              – Z A
              Nov 13 at 15:13













            1












            1








            1






            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.






            share|improve this answer












            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.







            share|improve this answer












            share|improve this answer



            share|improve this answer










            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
















            • 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













            0














            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.






            share|improve this answer

























              0














              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.






              share|improve this answer























                0












                0








                0






                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.






                share|improve this answer












                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.







                share|improve this answer












                share|improve this answer



                share|improve this answer










                answered Nov 13 at 15:14









                Z A

                32




                32



























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