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  2. Certificate signing request - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Certificate_signing_request

    The PKCS#10 standard defines a binary format for encoding CSRs for use with X.509. It is expressed in ASN.1. Here is an example of how you can examine its ASN.1 structure using OpenSSL: openssl asn1parse -i -in your_request.p10. A CSR may be represented as a Base64 encoded PKCS#10; an example of which is given below:

  3. PKCS - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PKCS

    See RFC 2985. Defines selected attribute types for use in PKCS #6 extended certificates, PKCS #7 digitally signed messages, PKCS #8 private-key information, and PKCS #10 certificate-signing requests. PKCS #10: 1.7: Certification Request Standard [9] See RFC 2986. Format of messages sent to a certification authority to request certification of a ...

  4. Enrollment over Secure Transport - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Enrollment_over_Secure...

    The Enrollment over Secure Transport, or EST is a cryptographic protocol that describes an X.509 certificate management protocol targeting public key infrastructure (PKI) clients that need to acquire client certificates and associated certificate authority (CA) certificates. EST is described in RFC 7030.

  5. Simple Certificate Enrollment Protocol - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Simple_Certificate...

    Due to the use of the self-signed PKCS#10 format for Certificate Signing Requests (CSR), certificates can be enrolled only for keys that support (some form of) signing. A limitation shared by other enrollment protocols based on PKCS#10 CSRs, e.g., EST and ACME , or even the web-based enrollment workflow of most PKI software where the requester ...

  6. Extensible Authentication Protocol - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Extensible_Authentication...

    In addition to peer authentication, TEAP allows the peer to ask the server for a certificate by sending a request in PKCS#10 format. After receiving the certificate request and authenticating the peer, the server can provision a certificate to the peer in PKCS#7 format (RFC 2325). The server can also distribute trusted root certificates to the ...

  7. SSLeay - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SSLeay

    SSLeay supports X.509v3 certificates and PKCS#10 certificate requests. [6] It supports SSL2 and SSL3. [7] Also supported is TLSv1. [8] The first secure FTP implementation was created under BSD using SSLeay by Tim Hudson. [1] The first open source Certifying Authority implementation was created with CGI scripts using SSLeay by Clifford Heath.

  8. Comparison of TLS implementations - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_TLS...

    Schannel 10 v1607 / 2016 [66] No Disabled by default Yes Yes Yes No Yes Yes Schannel 11 / 2022 [67] No Disabled by default Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Secure Transport. OS X 10.2-10.7, iOS 1-4 Yes Yes Yes No No No No Secure Transport OS X 10.8-10.10, iOS 5-8 No [d] Yes Yes Yes [d] Yes [d] Yes [d] No Secure Transport OS X 10.11, iOS 9 No No [d] Yes ...

  9. wolfSSL - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/WolfSSL

    PKCS #3 - Diffie-Hellman Key Agreement; PKCS #5 - Password-Based Encryption; PKCS #7 - Cryptographic Message Syntax (CMS) PKCS #8 - Private-Key Information Syntax; PKCS #9 - Selected Attribute Types; PKCS #10 - Certificate signing request (CSR) PKCS #11 - Cryptographic Token Interface; PKCS #12 - Certificate/Personal Information Exchange Syntax ...