You can use vSphere Certificate Manager to generate Certificate Signing Requests (CSRs). Submit those CSRs to your enterprise CA or to an external certificate authority for signing. You can use the signed certificates with the different supported certificate replacement processes.
- You can use vSphere Certificate Manager to create the CSR.
- If you prefer to create the CSR manually, the certificate that you send to be signed must meet the following requirements.
- Key size: 2048 bits or more
- PEM format. VMware supports PKCS8 and PKCS1 (RSA keys). When keys are added to VECS, they are converted to PKCS8.
- x509 version 3
- If you are using custom certificates, the CA extension must be set to true for root certificates, and cert sign must be in the list of requirements.
- CRL signing must be enabled.
- Enhanced Key Usage can be either empty or contain Server Authentication.
- No explicit limit to the length of the certificate chain. VMCA uses the OpenSSL default, which is 10 certificates.
- Certificates with wildcards or with more than one DNS name are not supported.
- You cannot create subsidiary CAs of VMCA.
See the VMware knowledge base article at http://kb.vmware.com/kb/2112009, Creating a Microsoft Certificate Authority Template for SSL certificate creation in vSphere 6.0, for an example using Microsoft Certificate Authority.
Prerequisites
vSphere Certificate Manager prompts you for information. The prompts depend on your environment and on the type of certificate that you want to replace.
For any CSR generation, you are prompted for the password of the [email protected] user, or for the administrator of the vCenter Single Sign-On domain that you are connecting to.
Procedure
What to do next
Replace the existing root certificate with the chained root certificate. See Replace VMCA Root Certificate with Custom Signing Certificate and Replace All Certificates.