How relevant is this one here? https://bugzilla.ipfire.org/show_bug.cgi?id=10482 -Michael On Mon, 2018-06-18 at 08:21 -0400, Tom Rymes wrote: > Erik, > > Tossing this back on the list, I hope you don't mind. > > My apologies, I was unclear. What I mean is that the user will *want* a > longer lifetime, even though the longest *possible* lifetime will be too > long for security reasons. > > In other words, my suggestion would be to use the longest lifetime > consistent with best practices, like those that you include below. > > Tom > > On 06/18/2018 8:00 AM, ummeegge wrote: > > Hi Tom, > > in my opinion this is the wrong suggestion since we circumvent in fact > > the new security feature from OpenSSL. The longest lifetime would be > > then '999998' days which is adequate to ~2740 years whereby we and our > > systems possibly wont go through :D . > > > > Additionally OpenVPNs hardening wiki --> https://community.openvpn.net/openv > > pn/wiki/Hardening#X.509keysize > > points a so called "future system near term use" (data are from Enisa) out > > whereby 3072 bit RSA key lenghts and more are recommended to stay safe in > > Enisa definitions for at least 10 years (research was from 2013) but IPFire > > uses > > currently 2048 bit RSA for the host certificate. > > > > May not representative but Microsoft said in 2009 something like this: > > > > Key length of 1024: Validity period = not greater than 6-12 monthsKey > > length of 2048: Validity period = not greater than 2 yearsKey length of > > 4096: Validity period = not greater than 16 years > > > > <-- is from https://cloudblogs.microsoft.com/enterprisemobility/2009/06/12/r > > ecommendations-for-pki-key-lengths-and-validity-periods-with-configuration- > > manager/ > > > > May there are more actual papers for that... > > > > > > Best, > > > > Erik > > > > > > Am Montag, den 18.06.2018, 06:27 -0400 schrieb Tom Rymes: > > > I’d suggest that most users likely want the longest lifetime for > > > their certs that they can get, so as to avoid the need to frequently > > > replace expired certificates. > > > > > > This is especially true because there is no way to recreate certs in > > > the WUI when they expire, so you have to delete the entry and > > > recreate it when that happens. > > > > > > https://bugzilla.ipfire.org/show_bug.cgi?id=11742 > > > > > > My $0.02, > > > > > > Tom > > > > > > On Jun 18, 2018, at 3:56 AM, ummeegge wrote: > > > > > > > Hi Michael, > > > > yes but the needs in there can differs a lot so the question arises > > > > what is a good default ? > > > > Another idea might be to add another (or a range of possible days) > > > > text > > > > for that field ? > > > > May the error message if an entry triggers one can also be > > > > extended. > > > > > > > > Greetings, > > > > > > > > Erik > > > > > > > > Am Sonntag, den 17.06.2018, 19:14 +0100 schrieb Michael Tremer: > > > > > Hello, > > > > > > can we also set a good default value for this? > > > > > > > > > This can be a little bit confusing for new users and it would be good > > > > > > to have > > > > > > some guidance. It can be a separate patch. > > > > > > > > > Best, > > > > > > -Michael > > > > > > > > > On Fri, 2018-06-15 at 14:59 +0200, ummeegge wrote: > > > > > > > > > > > Have seen it too late to announce it in the commit message but this > > > > patch solves also Bug #11715 > > > > > > > > Best, > > > > > > > > Erik > >