What is in a digital certificate
Digital certificates contain specific pieces of information, as determined by the X.509 standard.
Digital certificates used by IBM MQ comply with the X.509 standard, which specifies the information that is required and the format for sending it. X.509 is the Authentication framework part of the X.500 series of standards.
Digital certificates contain at least the following information about the entity being certified:- The owner's public key
- The owner's Distinguished Name
- The Distinguished Name of the CA that issued the certificate
- The date from which the certificate is valid
- The expiry date of the certificate
- The version number of the certificate data format as defined in X.509. The current version of the X.509 standard is Version 3, and most certificates conform to that version.
- A serial number. This is a unique identifier assigned by the CA which issued the certificate. The serial number is unique within the CA which issued the certificate: no two certificates signed by the same CA certificate have the same serial number.
An X.509 Version 2 certificate also contains an Issuer Identifier and a Subject Identifier, and an X.509 Version 3 certificate can contain a number of extensions. Some certificate extensions, such as the Basic Constraint extension, are standard, but others are implementation-specific. An extension can be critical, in which case a system must be able to recognize the field; if it does not recognize the field, it must reject the certificate. If an extension is not critical, the system can ignore it if it does not recognize it.
The digital signature in a personal certificate is generated using the private key of the CA which signed that certificate. Anyone who needs to verify the personal certificate can use the CA's public key to do so. The CA's certificate contains its public key.
Digital certificates do not contain your private key. We must keep your private key secret.
Parent topic: Digital certificates