Requirements and Prerequisites for Certificates
Supported Domains
Any
User Roles
Admin
Network Admin
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Any
Admin
Network Admin
When a PKI enrollment object is associated with and then installed on a device, the certificate enrollment process starts immediately. The process is automatic for self-signed and SCEP enrollment types; it does not require any additional administrator's action. Manual certificate enrollment requires administrator's action.
When the certificate enrollment is complete, a trustpoint exists on the device with the same name as the certificate enrollment object. Use this trustpoint in the configuration of your VPN Authentication Method.
threat defense devices support certificate enrollment using Microsoft Certificate Authority(CA) Service, and CA Services provided on Cisco Adaptive Security Appliances(ASA) and Cisco IOS Router.
threat defense devices cannot be configured as a certificate authority (CA).
Certificate enrollment can be done in a child or parent domain.
When enrollment is done from a parent domain, the certificate enrollment object also needs to be in the same domain. If the trustpoint on a device is overridden in the child domain, the overridden value will be deployed on the device.
When the certificate enrollment is done on a device in a leaf domain, the enrollment will be visible to the parent domain or another child domain. Also, adding additional certificates is possible.
When a leaf domain is deleted, certificate enrollments on the contained devices will be automatically removed.
Once a device has certificates enrolled in one domain, it will be allowed to be enrolled in any other domain. The certificates can be added in the other domain.
When you move a device from one domain to another, the certificates also get moved accordingly. You will receive an alert to delete the enrollments on these devices.
See PKI Infrastructure and Digital Certificates for an introduction to Digital Certificates.
See Certificate Enrollment Objects for a description of the objects used to enroll and obtain certificates on managed devices.
Step 1 |
Select . You can see the following columns for each device listed on this screen:
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Step 2 |
Choose (+) Add to associate and install an enrollment object on a device. When a certificate enrollment object is associated with and then installed on a device, the process of certificate enrollment starts immediately. The process is automatic for self-signed and SCEP enrollment types, meaning it does not require any additional administrator action. Manual certificate enrollment requires extra administrator action.
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You can set the management center to automatically update the CA certificates through CLI commands. By default, the CA certificates are automatically updated when you install or upgrade to version 7.0.5.
Note |
In an IPv6-only deployment, the automatic update of CA certificates may fail, because, some of the Cisco servers do not support IPv6. In such cases, force update the CA certificates using the configure cert-update run-now force command. |
Step 1 |
Log into the FMC CLI using SSH, or, if virtual, open the VM console. |
Step 2 |
You can verify whether the CA certificates in the local system are the latest or not: configure cert-update test This command compares the CA bundle on the local system with the latest CA bundle (from the Cisco server). If the CA bundle is up to date, no connection check is executed and the test result is displayed as the one below: Example:
If the CA bundle is out of date, the connection check is executed on the downloaded CA bundle and the test result is displayed. Example:
Example:
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Step 3 |
(Optional) To instantly update the CA bundles: configure cert-update run-now Example:
When you execute this command, the CA certificates (from the Cisco server) are verified for SSL connectivity. If the SSL connectivity check fails for even one of the Cisco servers, the process is terminated. Example:
To proceed with the update despite connection failures, use the force keyword. Example:
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Step 4 |
If you do not want the CA bundles to be automatically updated, disable the configuration: configure cert-update auto-update disable Example:
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Step 5 |
To re-enable the automatic update of CA bundles: configure cert-update auto-update enable Example:
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Step 6 |
(Optional) View the status of automatic update of CA certificates: show cert-update Example:
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Step 1 |
On the Devices > Certificates screen, choose Add to open the Add New Certificate dialog. |
Step 2 |
Choose a device from the Device drop-down list. |
Step 3 |
Associate a certificate enrollment object with this device in one of the following ways:
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Step 4 |
Press Add to start the Self Signed, automatic, enrollment process. For self signed enrollment type trustpoints, the CA Certificate status will always be displayed, since the managed device is acting as its own CA and does not need a CA certificate to generate its own Identity Certificate. The Identity Certificate will go from InProgress to Available as the device creates its own self signed identity certificate. |
Step 5 |
Click the magnifying glass to view the self-signed Identity Certificate created for this device. |
When enrollment is complete, a trustpoint exists on the device with the same name as the certificate enrollment object. Use this trustpoint in the configuration of your Site to Site and Remote Access VPN Authentication Method
Note |
Using EST enrollment establishes a direct connection between the managed device and the CA server. So be sure your device is connected to the CA server before beginning the enrollment process. |
Note |
EST's ability to auto-enroll a device when its certificate expires is not supported. |
Step 1 |
On the Devices > Certificates screen, click Add to open the Add New Certificate dialog. |
Step 2 |
Choose a device from the Device drop-down list. |
Step 3 |
Associate a certificate enrollment object with this device in one of the following ways:
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Step 4 |
Click Add to enroll the certificate on the device. The Identity Certificate will go from InProgress to Available as the device obtains its identity certificate using EST from the specified CA. Sometimes, a manual refresh might be required to obtain the identity certificate. |
Step 5 |
Click the magnifying glass to view the Identity Certificate created and installed on this device. |
Note |
Using SCEP enrollment establishes a direct connection between the managed device and the CA server. So be sure your device is connected to the CA server before beginning the enrollment process. |
Step 1 |
On the Devices > Certificates screen, choose Add to open the Add New Certificate dialog. |
Step 2 |
Choose a device from the Device drop-down list. |
Step 3 |
Associate a certificate enrollment object with this device in one of the following ways:
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Step 4 |
Press Add, to start the automatic enrollment process. For SCEP enrollment type trustpoints, the CA Certificate status will transition from InProgress to Available as the CA Certificate is obtained from the CA server and installed on the device. The Identity Certificate will go from InProgress to Available as the device obtains its identity certificate using SCEP from the specified CA. Sometimes, a manual refresh might be required to obtain the identity certificate. |
Step 5 |
Click the magnifying glass to view the Identity Certificate created and installed on this device. |
When enrollment is complete, a trustpoint exists on the device with the same name as the certificate enrollment object. Use this trustpoint in the configuration of your Site to Site and Remote Access VPN Authentication Method
Step 1 |
On the Devices > Certificates screen, choose Add to open the Add New Certificate dialog. |
Step 2 |
Choose a device from the Device drop-down list. |
Step 3 |
Associate a certificate enrollment object with this device in one of the following ways:
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Step 4 |
Press Add to start the enrollment process. |
Step 5 |
Execute the appropriate activity with your PKI CA Server to obtain an identity certificate. |
Step 6 |
Select Import to import the Identity Certificate. The Identity Certificate status will be Available when the import complete. |
Step 7 |
Click the magnifying glass to view the Identity Certificate for this device. |
When enrollment is complete, a trustpoint exists on the device with the same name as the certificate enrollment object. Use this trustpoint in the configuration of your Site to Site and Remote Access VPN Authentication Method
Step 1 |
Go to Devices > Certificates screen, choose Add to open the Add New Certificate dialog. |
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Step 2 |
Choose a pre-configured managed device from the Device drop down list. |
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Step 3 |
Associate a certificate enrollment object with this device in one of the following ways:
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Step 4 |
Press Add. The CA Certificate and Identity Certificate status will go from In Progress to Available as it installs the PKCS12 file on the device.
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Step 5 |
Once Available, click the magnifying glass to view the Identity Certificate for this device. |
The certificate (trustpoint) on the managed device is named the same as the PKCS#12 file. Use this certificate in your VPN authentication configuration.
See Secure Firewall Threat Defense VPN Certificate Guidelines and Limitations to determine if variations in your certificate enrollment environment may be causing a problem. Then consider the following:
If the CA Server's host name is given in the Enrollment Object, use Flex Config to configure DNS appropriately to reach the server. Alternatively, use the IP Address of the CA Server.
If you are using a Microsoft 2012 CA Server, the default IPsec Template is not accepted by the managed device and must be changed.
To configure a working template, follow these steps as you use MS CA documentation as a reference.
Duplicate the IPsec (Offline Request) template.
In Extensions > Application policies, select IP security end system, instead of the IP security IKE intermediate.
Set the permissions and the template name.
Add the new template and change the registry settings to reflect the new template name.
On the management center, you might receive the following health alert related to the threat defense device:
Code - F0853; Description - default Keyring's certificate is invalid, reason: expired
In such cases, use the following command to regenerate the default certificate in CLISH CLI:
> system support regenerate-security-keyring default
A red cross appears in the CA certificate status with the following error:
Fail to configure CA certificate
Solution: See Troubleshoot Certificate Error on FMC.
To check the list of the certificates in a .pfx file, use tools such as certutil
or openssl
. You can see the whole chain with ID certificate, SubCA certificate, and CA certificate (if any).
certutil -dump cert.pfx
openssl pkcs12 -info -in cert.pfx
The following error appears:
Identity certificate import required
Solution: See Troubleshoot Certificate Error "Identity certificate import required" on FMC.
Feature |
Minimum Management Center |
Minimum Threat Defense |
Details |
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Enhancements to Manual Enrollment |
6.7 |
Any |
You can now create only a CA certificate without an identity certificate. You can also generate a CSR without a CA certificate and obtain an identity certificate from the CA. |
PKCS CA Chain |
6.7 |
Any |
You can view and manage the chain of certifying authorities (CAs) issuing your certificates. You can also export a copy of the certificates. |