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It required support in dogtag which was added in 10.5.0. This is only easily configurable during installation because it will set ca.signing.defaultSigningAlgorithm to the selected algorithm in CS.cfg The certificate profiles will generally by default set default.params.signingAlg=- which means use the CA default. So while an existing installation will technically allow SHA384withRSA it will require profile changes and/or changing the defaultSigningAlgorithm in CS.cfg and restarting (completely untested). And that won't affect already issued-certificates. https://pagure.io/freeipa/issue/8906 Signed-off-by: Rob Crittenden <rcritten@redhat.com> Reviewed-By: Florence Blanc-Renaud <frenaud@redhat.com> |
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certmonger | ||
custodia | ||
html | ||
migration | ||
oddjob | ||
restart_scripts | ||
share | ||
tools | ||
ui | ||
updates | ||
wsgi | ||
Makefile.am | ||
README.schema |
Ground rules on adding new schema Brand new schema, particularly when written specifically for IPA, should be added in share/*.ldif. Any new files need to be explicitly loaded in ipaserver/install/dsinstance.py. These simply get copied directly into the new instance schema directory. Existing schema (e.g. in an LDAP draft) may either be added as a separate ldif in share or as an update in the updates directory. The advantage of adding the schema as an update is if 389-ds ever adds the schema then the installation won't fail due to existing schema failing to load during bootstrap. If the new schema requires a new container then this should be added to install/bootstrap-template.ldif.