This site will have limited functionality while we undergo maintenance to improve your experience. If an article doesn't solve your issue and you want to ask a question, we have our support community waiting to help you at @FirefoxSupport on Twitter and/r/firefox on Reddit.

Search Support

Avoid support scams. We will never ask you to call or text a phone number or share personal information. Please report suspicious activity using the “Report Abuse” option.

Learn More

How to trust a website only when there is manually imported certificate?

more options

Hello,

how to trust a website only when there is manually imported certificate?

I disabled all CAs and want to set FF to: 1) trust (and connect) only to sites for which I have imported certificate 2) do NOT trust to any other certificate (even issued by CA with imported cert).

Even if I have the certificate in the "Servers" list, FF still complains :( Tried in FF 39, 41 and 42 (linux 64bit).

Many thanks

Hello, how to trust a website only when there is manually imported certificate? I disabled all CAs and want to set FF to: 1) trust (and connect) only to sites for which I have imported certificate 2) do NOT trust to any other certificate (even issued by CA with imported cert). Even if I have the certificate in the "Servers" list, FF still complains :( Tried in FF 39, 41 and 42 (linux 64bit). Many thanks

Isisombulu esikhethiweyo

OK, thanks for your time.

The solution is: add the certificate exception in non-private firefox window. After restart, the cert is in cert_override.txt file in profile folder and Firefox connects to the server even if the root CA trust bits are disabled.

This is exactly the behavior I was looking for :)

Funda le mpendulo kwimeko leyo 👍 0

All Replies (6)

more options

Hi, When you say FF still complains :( can you please provide a screenshot of the error, we will need some more info to help.

For reference:

Note, real question might be was config entries need to be disabled.

more options

Hi, thanks for reply!

By "FF still complains" I mean standard error page "This Connection is Untrusted" with, or without, "Add exception" button.

To give you a real example:

I have current certificate for support.mozilla.org (SHA-256 = 2F:D5:63:1B:B0:CF:A0:1E:86:B3:F2:78:F1:0B:00:6F:5A:4B:E2:58:50:10:5E:0B:A3:A8:6E:4B:C4:5F:9F:1B) manually imported in Preferences->Advanced->Certificates->View Certificates->Servers list. I also have the root CA for this certificate (DigiCert High Assurance EV Root CA) distrusted (all 3 bits off).

But when I connect to the https://support.mozilla.org, I get the Untrusted Connection error page.

I want to set that the *manually imported* certificate (identified by checksums etc) would allow the connection even if his root CA is distrusted.

Any ideas how to do set it?

Thanks!

more options

Only if trust bit(s) are set then you can trust a website. You would normally have the trust bits set on a built-in root certificate. I assume that you would have to import the certificate under the authorities tab and set its trust bits to trust websites.

I don't know for what reason you have distrusted all built-in root certificates, but doing that doesn't make this easier.

more options

> I don't know for what reason you have distrusted all built-in root certificates, but doing that doesn't make this easier.

I explained this at the beginning. I want to trust only to manually imported certificates, not to any certificate from the root CAs. So the "set root CA's trust bits on" is not a solution. I hope it is clearer now.

more options

Yes, both senarios are recognized as mis-issued in Mozilla's CA certificate policy. Mentioned here

more options

Isisombululo esiKhethiweyo

OK, thanks for your time.

The solution is: add the certificate exception in non-private firefox window. After restart, the cert is in cert_override.txt file in profile folder and Firefox connects to the server even if the root CA trust bits are disabled.

This is exactly the behavior I was looking for :)