Join the AMA (Ask Me Anything) with the Firefox leadership team to celebrate Firefox 20th anniversary and discuss Firefox’s future on Mozilla Connect. Mark your calendar on Thursday, November 14, 18:00 - 20:00 UTC!

Vanwege onderhoudswerkzaamheden die uw ervaring zouden moeten verbeteren, heeft deze website beperkte functionaliteit. Als een artikel uw probleem niet verhelpt en u een vraag wilt stellen, kan onze ondersteuningsgemeenschap u helpen in @FirefoxSupport op Twitter en /r/firefox op Reddit.

Zoeken in Support

Vermijd ondersteuningsscams. We zullen u nooit vragen een telefoonnummer te bellen, er een sms naar te sturen of persoonlijke gegevens te delen. Meld verdachte activiteit met de optie ‘Misbruik melden’.

Meer info

Deze conversatie is gearchiveerd. Stel een nieuwe vraag als u hulp nodig hebt.

Firefox self signed certificate allow

  • 6 antwoorden
  • 9 hebben dit probleem
  • 17 weergaven
  • Laatste antwoord van Shadow110

more options

i have firewall device and i enable protocol HTTPS at login i create self signed certificate with openssl and put the certificate "trusted root certificate authorities" work correct with Microsoft Edg, Internet explorer and google chrome now at firefox when i import certificate at authorities not accept

i have firewall device and i enable protocol HTTPS at login i create self signed certificate with openssl and put the certificate "trusted root certificate authorities" work correct with Microsoft Edg, Internet explorer and google chrome now at firefox when i import certificate at authorities not accept

Alle antwoorden (6)

more options

Just going with this one..... The website may try to fallback to TLS 1.0 in a way that is no longer allowed in current releases or may be using a deprecated cipher suite.

You can open the about:config page via the location/address bar and use its search bar to locate this pref:

   security.tls.insecure_fallback_hosts 

You can double-click the line to modify the pref and add full domain to this pref. If there are already websites (domains) in this list then add a comma and the new domain (no spaces). You should only see domains separated by a comma in the value column.

Ca not see your Firefox version so will go with ver 54 (other versions on page link) https://www.fxsitecompat.com/en-CA/versions/54/

and assuming you've imported your CA cert underneath the 'Authorities' tab. Restart FF after importing the cert.

I'd expect you're being prompted to set the trust level upon importing the cert. If not you can do that manually via the 'Edit Trust' button.

Though I do think self signed security certificates are getting into no trust area as you say.

Please let us know if this solved your issue or if need further assistance.

more options

thank for reply i did your steps and same warning i wan't to ignore warning i want the page is trusted i create certificate .pfx with privet key to import to "your certificate" and imported success but same warning

more options

Really do think your in the wrong place for figuring this out. And self signed is really no matter what you do will come up sooner or later on all browsers as not trusted.

As you can see the help I am finding is not from Firefox Support.

https://www.poweradmin.com/help/sslhints/firefox.aspx

https://www.ibm.com/support/knowledgecenter/SSJJ9R_4.0.6/com.ibm.rational.rrdi.admin.doc/topics/t_browser_ss_cert.html

https://www.ibm.com/support/knowledgecenter/en/SS8JFY_7.5.0/com.ibm.lmt75.doc/com.ibm.license.mgmt.security.doc/t_add_self_signed_cert_firefox.html

https://www.digicert.com/ssl-support/certificate-not-trusted-error.htm

Please let us know if this solved your issue or if need further assistance.

more options
more options

thanks i will ignore warning

more options

Please let us know if this solved your issue by clicking solved or if need further assistance.