Hilfe durchsuchen

Vorsicht vor Support-Betrug: Wir fordern Sie niemals auf, eine Telefonnummer anzurufen, eine SMS an eine Telefonnummer zu senden oder persönliche Daten preiszugeben. Bitte melden Sie verdächtige Aktivitäten über die Funktion „Missbrauch melden“.

Weitere Informationen

We operate in a very restricted DNS environment and downloading sites with signed wildcard SSL is very slow so how do we disable all checks and keep HTTPS?

  • 2 Antworten
  • 3 haben dieses Problem
  • 1 Aufruf
  • Letzte Antwort von ELCV

more options

If we were using a self-signed certificate we could add an exception. But we use a DigiCert wildcard certificate. Our sites use a very restricted DNS with maybe a dozen URLs for which a name resolves to an IP. When Firefox is used to access our sites over HTTPS it is slow and often fails to load bu serving up error messages on the security of the site. I believe this is because it is looking to verify the certificate or revocation. We do not have this issue using HTTP. I have disabled "Query OCSP" but it has not helped.

Any assistance would be appreciated.

Thanks.

If we were using a self-signed certificate we could add an exception. But we use a DigiCert wildcard certificate. Our sites use a very restricted DNS with maybe a dozen URLs for which a name resolves to an IP. When Firefox is used to access our sites over HTTPS it is slow and often fails to load bu serving up error messages on the security of the site. I believe this is because it is looking to verify the certificate or revocation. We do not have this issue using HTTP. I have disabled "Query OCSP" but it has not helped. Any assistance would be appreciated. Thanks.

Ausgewählte Lösung

So, I have a solution for this, but I don't consider it ideal.

Our certificate provider uses two URLs resolving to a single IP to validate certificates. Adding these records to our restricted DNS solves the problem. However, IPs addresses do change from time-to-time and each site would have to be updated should that happen.

Ideally, it would be nice if Mozilla would add a "trust" or whitelist option to Firefox.

Thanks.

Diese Antwort im Kontext lesen 👍 0

Alle Antworten (2)

more options

I've called the big guys to help you. Good luck.

more options

Ausgewählte Lösung

So, I have a solution for this, but I don't consider it ideal.

Our certificate provider uses two URLs resolving to a single IP to validate certificates. Adding these records to our restricted DNS solves the problem. However, IPs addresses do change from time-to-time and each site would have to be updated should that happen.

Ideally, it would be nice if Mozilla would add a "trust" or whitelist option to Firefox.

Thanks.