An impasse over carriage rights fees may result in a blackout of Comcast SportsNet Chicago for Dish Network subscribers beginning next month, potentially cutting off Chicago Bulls and Blackh...
Expires on: Apr 10 13:39:41 2013 GMT - that's 363 days from today. The site tested is NOT the same as the Subject CN ip-00-00-00-000!. I even went & copied the VistualHost to instead of & restarted apache, all in vain. I've been banging my head against the wall for days now. I'm pretty sure I'm missing a tiny something to make this work, I just don't know what exactly. I'd be infinitely grateful if someone can suggest something to make this work!
Note: If it is not, please run the following command, which should enable the ssl module and add it to this list: sudo a2enmod ssl From this same file, please find APACHE_SERVER_FLAGS="" and add SSL in between the quotations. Create a virtual host for ssl by copying from the template: cp /etc/apache2/vhosts. d/vhost-ssl. template /etc/apache2/vhosts. d/ Configure Apache to use new certificate files: From a terminal window: cd /etc/apache2/vhosts. d/ Edit file Update paths to the appropriate file(s) as needed:
SSLCertificateFile
Posted June 7, 2018 Last Updated On May 28, 2020 Get a Certificate To set up SSL, please prepare a private key and certificate from a certificate issuer like Let's Encrypt. You can follow one of these guides, if necessary: public certificate via Let's Encrypt, or private self-signed certificate. You can set up SSL at the listener level or the virtual host level. Virtual host level certificates will override server/lisener level certificates. Set up SSL Certificate at the Listener Level Create an SSL Listener if it does exist yet Access the WebAdmin Console at port 7080 on your domain. Navigate to Listeners and click the Add button to create an HTTPS listener. The most important steps here involve setting Secure to Yes and making sure to set the listener to the right IP and port. HTTPS connections usually use port 443 by default. Click the Save button once you finish the setup. Listener name: HTTPS (or any appropriate name of your choice) IP Address: ANY Port: 443 Secure: Yes Specify SSL Key and Certificate Navigate to the WebAdmin Console > Listeners > HTTPS (or whatever name you used) > SSL, and click the Edit button.
I'm having hard time trying to setup an SSL certificate (it's a Comodo PositiveSSL purshased from NameCheap) on my EC2 micro instance (I'm using Amazon Linux AMI 2012. 3, which is based on CentOS if I'm not mistaken). Here's what I did:
I installed mod_ssl & OpenSSL
I enabled port 443 on my EC2's instance security group
I CHMODed the * & * files to 777 as Comodo suggested
I'm certain the IP address & files path are correct (put a bunch of
0s in the example but it is correct in my)
I added this VirtualHost entry to