I'm about to purchase a SSL certificiate for a small website. Is it best practice to enter 'www.domainName.com' or 'domainName.com' for the common name?
问题:
回答1:
Make sure you use the subjectAltName
field, and include all variations of the hostname(s) you want to use, or a wildcard if you aren't sure what all the variations will be. The common name (CN) is only used as a backup. See RFC 2818 for more details:
3.1. Server Identity
In general, HTTP/TLS requests are generated by dereferencing a URI. As a consequence, the hostname for the server is known to the client. If the hostname is available, the client MUST check it against the server's identity as presented in the server's Certificate message, in order to prevent man-in-the-middle attacks.
If the client has external information as to the expected identity of the server, the hostname check MAY be omitted. (For instance, a client may be connecting to a machine whose address and hostname are dynamic but the client knows the certificate that the server will present.) In such cases, it is important to narrow the scope of acceptable certificates as much as possible in order to prevent man in the middle attacks. In special cases, it may be appropriate for the client to simply ignore the server's identity, but it must be understood that this leaves the connection open to active attack.
If a subjectAltName extension of type dNSName is present, that MUST be used as the identity. Otherwise, the (most specific) Common Name field in the Subject field of the certificate MUST be used. Although the use of the Common Name is existing practice, it is deprecated and Certification Authorities are encouraged to use the dNSName instead.
Matching is performed using the matching rules specified by [RFC2459]. If more than one identity of a given type is present in the certificate (e.g., more than one dNSName name, a match in any one of the set is considered acceptable.) Names may contain the wildcard character * which is considered to match any single domain name component or component fragment. E.g.,
*.a.com
matchesfoo.a.com
but notbar.foo.a.com
.f*.com
matchesfoo.com
but notbar.com
.In some cases, the URI is specified as an IP address rather than a hostname. In this case, the iPAddress subjectAltName must be present in the certificate and must exactly match the IP in the URI.
If the hostname does not match the identity in the certificate, user oriented clients MUST either notify the user (clients MAY give the user the opportunity to continue with the connection in any case) or terminate the connection with a bad certificate error. Automated clients MUST log the error to an appropriate audit log (if available) and SHOULD terminate the connection (with a bad certificate error). Automated clients MAY provide a configuration setting that disables this check, but MUST provide a setting which enables it.
Note that in many cases the URI itself comes from an untrusted source. The above-described check provides no protection against attacks where this source is compromised. For example, if the URI was obtained by clicking on an HTML page which was itself obtained without using HTTP/TLS, a man in the middle could have replaced the URI. In order to prevent this form of attack, users should carefully examine the certificate presented by the server to determine if it meets their expectations.
回答2:
It must exactly match the URL that appears in the address bar of your website. If you allow visitors to access the site using both variations, then one of them will give a certificate error if the certificate is for the other.
Don't make the mistake of thinking you can avoid this by redirecting all accesses to a "canonical" format, for example redirecting example.com to www.example.com and have a certificate for www.example.com. As Mike points out in his comment, it won't work with https.
If you can't do that, you can use a wildcard certificate with a "Subject Alternative Name" to have it apply to both.
Maybe see this question on serverfault.com: How to install a single SSL certificate for www and non-www