6.0.3

Table Of Contents
Certificate Replacement in Environments that Include External Solutions
Some solutions, such as VMware vCenter Site Recovery Manager or VMware vSphere Replication are
always installed on a dierent machine than the vCenter Server system or Platform Services Controller. If
you replace the default machine SSL certicate on the vCenter Server system or the
Platform Services Controller, a connection error results if the solution aempts to connect to the
vCenter Server system.
You can run the ls_update_certs script to resolve the issue. See VMware Knowledge Base article 2109074 for
details.
Managing Certificates with the Platform Services Controller Web
Interface
You can view and manage certicates by logging in to the Platform Services Controller web interface. You
can perform many certicate management tasks either with the vSphere Certicate Manager utility or by
using this web interface.
The Platform Services Controller web interface allows you to perform these management tasks.
n
View the current certicate stores and add and remove certicate store entries.
n
View the VMware Certicate Authority (VMCA) instance associated with this
Platform Services Controller.
n
View certicates that are generated by VMware Certicate Authority.
n
Renew existing certicates or replace certicates.
Most parts of the certicate replacement workows are supported fully from the
Platform Services Controller web interface. For generating CSRs, you can use the vSphere Certicate
Manage utility.
Supported Workflows
After you install a Platform Services Controller, the VMware Certicate Authority on that node provisions
all other nodes in the environment with certicates by default. You can use one of the following workows
to renew or replace certicates.
Renew Certificates
You can have VMCA generate a new root certicate and renew all certicates
in your environment from the Platform Services Controller web interface.
Make VMCA an
Intermediate CA
You can generate a CSR using the vSphere Certicate Manager utility, edit
the certicate you receive from the CSR to add VMCA to the chain, and then
add the certicate chain and private key to your environment. When you
then renew all certicates, VMCA provisions all machines and solution users
with certicates that are signed by the full chain.
Replace Certificates
with Custom
Certificates
If you do not want to use VMCA, you can generate CSRs for the certicates
that you want to replace. The CA returns a root certicate and a signed
certicate for each CSR. You can upload the root certicate and the custom
certicates from the Platform Services Controller.
If you have to replace the VMware Directory Service (vmdir) root certicate, or if company policy requires
that you replace the vCenter Single Sign-On certicate in a mixed-mode environment, you can use CLI
commands to replace those certicates after replacing the other certicates. See “Replace the VMware
Directory Service Certicate,” on page 110 and “Replace the VMware Directory Service Certicate in Mixed
Mode Environments,” on page 101.
vSphere Security
76 VMware, Inc.