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    pfSense certificate

    Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved General pfSense Questions
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    • stephenw10S
      stephenw10 Netgate Administrator
      last edited by

      If the cert is expired you will see an alert for it in the gui and can renew the cert in the cert manager.

      If it's just because it's a self-signed cert then the browser will normally allow you accept it permanently.

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      • H
        hspindel @stephenw10
        last edited by

        @stephenw10

        Thank you for the reply.

        There are no alerts within the pfSense GUI. If I check the available certificates there is a self-signed certificate valid until 5/24/25.

        I don't see any option to make the exception permanent in Firefox. Perhaps this has become more of a Firefox question than pfSense?

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        • stephenw10S
          stephenw10 Netgate Administrator
          last edited by

          Yup could be. I use Firefox here and only ever have to allow the cert exception once per device.

          What actual error is shown?

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          • the otherT
            the other
            last edited by

            hey there,
            I don't think it is a question of expiring...rather it seems to me, it is a question of "does Firefox already know about your self-signed cert?"
            I use certificate manager on pfsense to make my own CA and use that to issue my own ssl certificates (and user ones as well). So in my LAN I have https active, using self-signed certs for servers at home (and a self-signed webGUI cert for pfsense instead of the default one).
            BUT: you need to make that issuing CA known to your browser.

            So: export your CAs cert, import that to Firefox (settings > security > certificates I think) and then...it should no longer give out warnings and you do not need exceptions any more (since your browser sees your self-signed certs and trusts your issuing CA).

            At least that's what I suggest... :)

            the other

            pure amateur home user, no business or professional background
            please excuse poor english skills and typpoz :)

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              hspindel @the other
              last edited by

              @the-other Thank you for the reply. I tried importing the certificate to Firefox, and Firefox said there was no need since it already had the certificate.

              So perhaps this is not a certificate issue.

              keyserK 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • keyserK
                keyser Rebel Alliance @hspindel
                last edited by

                @hspindel It’s likeky because you have set a validity span that is too long on your self signed certificate. I think the limit is around 390 days right now - otherwise the browser will declare the certificate invalid. Those limits are expected to drop further in the future i think

                Love the no fuss of using the official appliances :-)

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                • the otherT
                  the other
                  last edited by the other

                  Sure you imported the ca one? First export from pfsense...I did not mean the ssl server cert, just to be sure.
                  @keyser
                  I read about limited lifespan acceptance too. Still, my certs have 3650 days and still got accepted...

                  the other

                  pure amateur home user, no business or professional background
                  please excuse poor english skills and typpoz :)

                  keyserK 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • keyserK
                    keyser Rebel Alliance @the other
                    last edited by

                    @the-other said in pfSense certificate:

                    Sure you imported the ca one? First export from pfsense...I did not mean the ssl server cert, just to be sure.
                    @keyser
                    I read about limited lifespan acceptance too. Still, my certs have 3650 days and still got accepted...

                    Yes, it will be accepted and installed, but it will throw you the certificate warning every once in a while anyways - haven’t quite figured out how that interval is determined

                    Love the no fuss of using the official appliances :-)

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                      hspindel @keyser
                      last edited by

                      Was able to reproduce the issue. Actual firefox message is:

                      Warning: Potential Security Risk Ahead

                      Firefox detected a potential security threat and did not continue to <local IP>.

                      Issue is most likely with the website and there is nothing you can do to resolve it.


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                      • stephenw10S
                        stephenw10 Netgate Administrator
                        last edited by

                        Does it tell you what the issue is?

                        The usual warning from the self signed cert is:
                        Screenshot from 2025-02-05 10-30-58.png

                        But you can just accept that and it won't usually ask again.
                        Screenshot from 2025-02-05 10-32-16.png

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                        • H
                          hspindel @stephenw10
                          last edited by

                          @stephenw10 Yes, that is the exact same warning screen I see. Unfortunately it reappears no matter how many times I accept it.

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                          • stephenw10S
                            stephenw10 Netgate Administrator
                            last edited by

                            Hmm, that has to be a security setting in Firefox.

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