Today we are pleased to announce the general availability of Red Hat Certificate System 7.3. Containing a highly configurable set of software components and tools for creating, deploying and managing certificates, Red Hat Certificate System is a powerful security framework to guarantee the identity of users and ensure privacy of communications. Based on open standards for certificate management, Certificate System provides a complete, customizable, robust, scalable and high-performance certificate management solution for public-key infrastructure (PKI), extranets and intranets.

The release boasts multiple new features:

  • Registration Authority (RA)
    A front-end subsystem to the Certificate Authority (CA), the RA performs local authentication, requestor information gathering and request validation. It is also responsible for forwarding requests to the CA for signing.
  • Simple Certificate Enrollment Protocol (SCEP)
    A protocol designed by Cisco, SCEP specifies a way for a router to communicate with RAs and CAs for enrollment. Red Hat Certificate System 7.3 enables routers to enroll for a certificate from an RA using this protocol.
  • Auto-Enrollment Proxy (AEP)
    Designed to integrate seamlessly with an existing Windows Active Directory (AD) infrastructure, the AEP allows users and computers in a Microsoft Windows domain to automatically enroll for certificates issued from Red Hat Certificate System.
  • Security Officer (SO) mode
    Smart Card Manager, in conjunction with the latest TPS Server software, now supports a special “Security Officer” mode of operation. This special mode, presented as an alternative to the standard user centric experience, allows a supervisory individual (e.g. Security Officer), the ability to oversee the face-to-face enrollment of regular users in a given organization.
  • In addition to Windows and Red Hat Enterprise Linux, the Enterprise Security Client (ESC) now supports Intel MAC 10.4.x.

Use of certificates with Red Hat Enterprise Linux 5:

Red Hat Certificate system can be used together with smart cards to increase the level of authentication security. Red Hat Certificate System can create and manage an end user’s certificate which is stored on a smart card.

The end user can insert his smart card into a smart card reader attached to a Red Hat Enterprise Linux 5 system. The end user then authenticates with his/her PIN and smartcard to gain access. The system can leverage this smart card authentication to generate a Kerberos ticket for the user that enables single-sign on to kerberos-aware applications like SSH, SCP and Fedora Directory server. Firefox and Thunderbird can use the end-user’s certificate to perform SSL client authentication to a web server that supports this.

For more information on Red Hat products, including the Red Hat Certificate System and Red Hat Enterprise Linux 5, visit here.


Über den Autor

UI_Icon-Red_Hat-Close-A-Black-RGB

Nach Thema durchsuchen

automation icon

Automatisierung

Das Neueste zum Thema IT-Automatisierung für Technologien, Teams und Umgebungen

AI icon

Künstliche Intelligenz

Erfahren Sie das Neueste von den Plattformen, die es Kunden ermöglichen, KI-Workloads beliebig auszuführen

open hybrid cloud icon

Open Hybrid Cloud

Erfahren Sie, wie wir eine flexiblere Zukunft mit Hybrid Clouds schaffen.

security icon

Sicherheit

Erfahren Sie, wie wir Risiken in verschiedenen Umgebungen und Technologien reduzieren

edge icon

Edge Computing

Erfahren Sie das Neueste von den Plattformen, die die Operations am Edge vereinfachen

Infrastructure icon

Infrastruktur

Erfahren Sie das Neueste von der weltweit führenden Linux-Plattform für Unternehmen

application development icon

Anwendungen

Entdecken Sie unsere Lösungen für komplexe Herausforderungen bei Anwendungen

Virtualization icon

Virtualisierung

Erfahren Sie das Neueste über die Virtualisierung von Workloads in Cloud- oder On-Premise-Umgebungen