Book Image

Getting Started with XenDesktop 7.x

By : Craig Thomas Ellrod
Book Image

Getting Started with XenDesktop 7.x

By: Craig Thomas Ellrod

Overview of this book

Table of Contents (27 chapters)
Getting Started with XenDesktop 7.x
Credits
Notice
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Creating a Domain Certificate Authority
Index

Creating a certificate request


To create a certificate request, perform the following steps:

  1. Navigate to Traffic Management | SSL. Under SSL Keys, select the Create RSA Key option, as shown in the following screenshot:

  2. To create the RSA key, enter a Key Filename and Key Size(bits) value, set the Public Exponent Value as F4, choose PEM as Key Format, and click on OK, as shown in the following screenshot:

  3. Under Tools, select Create CSR (Certificate Signing Request). Enter the Request File Name and Key Filename you have created in the previous step. Choose PEM as Key Format, enter the password from the time the RSA key was created, enter the details in the Distinguished Name Fields section, and click on OK, as shown in the following screenshot.

    Note

    Common Name must match the Fully Qualified Domain Name used to access the Site; for example, ng.xenpipe.com is what we will use to connect to NetScaler Gateway. So, in this example, as before, we create a wildcard certificate that will work across all subdomains; hence, you see *.xenpipe.com in the Common Name field. If you don't do this, the certificate will not work.

  4. Download the Certificate Signing Request from NetScaler Gateway. You can do this using WinSCP as we did in Appendix C, Creating Self-signed Certificates for NetScaler Gateway, or you can use the NetScaler tool. Navigate to Traffic Management | SSL | Tools | Manage Certificates / Keys / CSRs as shown in the following screenshot:

  5. Select the request file you just created and click on Download…, as shown in the following screenshot:

  6. Open the request file using a text editor, for example, Notepad. Copy the text as shown in the following screenshot:

    Note

    Certificate request files are encrypted and appear as a big block of garbled text. To submit a request to a public CA, you simply copy the text and paste it into the public CA's web form. We will see how to paste this text into the public CA's web form in the next section.