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There also may be more than one... they should be part of your
certificate you received. Double click on it and view the certificate
path. You'll see one or more CA, then the actual certificate at the
bottom of the path.

You need to import all CAs from the certificate.

Brad
www.bvstools.com

On Mon, Aug 27, 2012 at 4:13 PM, <brad.lovelady@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
You need to import their certificate authority first. The CA is a trusted Entity that digitally signed your new SSL certificate. Comodo should have a way for you to download a Root and/or intermediate CA. Once those are imported to DCM, then you can install the actual SSL certificate. Once you get the CA certificates use the same functions in DCM to import except be sure to select "Certificate Authority (CA)" when you get to the wizard screen that asks for type.

***********************************
Bradford Lovelady

Operating Systems Engineer
Technology Infrastructure Services

Wells Fargo Bank l 200 Wildwood Pkwy l Birmingham, AL 35209
MAC W2691-010
Tel 205-938-1999 l Cell 205-826-2834

brad.lovelady@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx


Wells Fargo Confidential

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-----Original Message-----
From: midrange-l-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:midrange-l-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Tom Hightower
Sent: Monday, August 27, 2012 3:38 PM
To: Midrange Systems Technical Discussion
Subject: Trying to import DCM certificate from Comodo

I'm trying to import a test SSL certificate that our network admin received
from Comodo.com, to be used as system certificate to allow us to offer
https: web services from our iSeries. I'm getting the following message:

An error occurred during certificate validation. The issuer of the
certificate may not be in the certificate store or the issuer may not be
enabled.

How do I add the issuer (comodo.com) into the certificate store, or enable
the issuer?

Thanks!
TomH

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