root ca/subordinate ca

root ca/subordinate ca

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Subject Author Date
root ca/subordinate ca RickyVene 10-03-2007
Posted by =?Utf-8?B?Umlja3lWZW5l?= on October 3, 2007, 9:11 am
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Is it possible to have a root CA standalone and then subordinate CA as
enterprise?

If that is possible, is the recovery on certificates still possible on the
enterprise level? I know that if you are using 2003 standard with CA you
don't have this feature.

Thanks,
Ricky

Posted by Paul Adare on October 3, 2007, 12:15 pm
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On Wed, 3 Oct 2007 06:11:02 -0700, RickyVene wrote:

> Is it possible to have a root CA standalone and then subordinate CA as
> enterprise?

Of course. In fact, for a two tier deployment, that is the recommended
configuration.

>
> If that is possible, is the recovery on certificates still possible on the
> enterprise level? I know that if you are using 2003 standard with CA you
> don't have this feature.

Yes, assuming you're talking about private key recovery here.


--
Paul Adare
MVP - Virtual Machines
http://www.identit.ca
Code: Virus lasting about three to five days, accompanied by sore throat,
runny nose and fever.

Posted by =?Utf-8?B?Umlja3lWZW5l?= on October 3, 2007, 3:17 pm
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thanks

"Paul Adare" wrote:

> On Wed, 3 Oct 2007 06:11:02 -0700, RickyVene wrote:
>
> > Is it possible to have a root CA standalone and then subordinate CA as
> > enterprise?
>
> Of course. In fact, for a two tier deployment, that is the recommended
> configuration.
>
> >
> > If that is possible, is the recovery on certificates still possible on the
> > enterprise level? I know that if you are using 2003 standard with CA you
> > don't have this feature.
>
> Yes, assuming you're talking about private key recovery here.
>
>
> --
> Paul Adare
> MVP - Virtual Machines
> http://www.identit.ca
> Code: Virus lasting about three to five days, accompanied by sore throat,
> runny nose and fever.
>

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