ZyXEL Communications G-3000H User Manual

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G-3000H User’s Guide
Chapter 11 Certificates
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H A P T E R
11
Certificates
This chapter gives background information about public-key certificates and explains how to 
use them.
11.1  Certificates Overview
The ZyAIR can use certificates (also called digital IDs) to authenticate users. Certificates are 
based on public-private key pairs. A certificate contains the certificate owner’s identity and 
public key. Certificates provide a way to exchange public keys for use in authentication. 
A Certification Authority (CA) issues certificates and guarantees the identity of each 
certificate owner. There are commercial certification authorities like CyberTrust or VeriSign 
and government certification authorities. You can use the ZyAIR to generate certification 
requests that contain identifying information and public keys and then send the certification 
requests to a certification authority. 
In public-key encryption and decryption, each host has two keys. One key is public and can be 
made openly available; the other key is private and must be kept secure. Public-key encryption 
in general works as follows. 
Tim wants to send a private message to Jenny. Tim generates a public key pair. What is 
encrypted with one key can only be decrypted using the other.
Tim keeps the private key and makes the public key openly available.
Tim uses his private key to encrypt the message and sends it to Jenny.
Jenny receives the message and uses Tim’s public key to decrypt it.
Additionally, Jenny uses her own private key to encrypt a message and Tim uses Jenny’s 
public key to decrypt the message.
The ZyAIR uses certificates based on public-key cryptology to authenticate users attempting 
to establish a connection, not to encrypt the data that you send after establishing a connection. 
The method used to secure the data that you send through an established connection depends 
on the type of connection. For example, a VPN tunnel might use the triple DES encryption 
algorithm.
The certification authority uses its private key to sign certificates. Anyone can then use the 
certification authority’s public key to verify the certificates.
A certification path is the hierarchy of certification authority certificates that validate a 
certificate. The ZyAIR does not trust a certificate if any certificate on its path has expired or 
been revoked. 
Certification authorities maintain directory servers with databases of valid and revoked 
certificates. A directory of certificates that have been revoked before the scheduled expiration 
is called a CRL (Certificate Revocation List). The ZyAIR can check a peer’s certificate against 
a directory server’s list of revoked certificates. The framework of servers, software, 
procedures and policies that handles keys is called PKI (public-key infrastructure).