Self-signed certificates and certificates signed by a public certificate authority - Verasys - LIT-12012324 - LC-SBH100-0 - LC-SBH200-0 - Supervisory controller - SBH100 - SBH200

Verasys Smart Building Hub (SBH) Network and IT Guidance Technical Bulletin

Brand
Verasys
Product name
SBH100
SBH200
Document type
Technical Bulletin
Document number
LIT-12012324
Revision date
2022-12-07
Product status
Active
Language
English

A self-signed certificate is a certificate that is signed by the same entity that it certifies. This term does not refer to the identity of the person or organization that actually performed the signing procedure. A self-signed certificate is a certificate signed with its own private key, that is, the entity signing the certificate is also the entity that created the certificate.

The SBH ships with a default Verasys self-signed certificate that provides secure communication. You can only install one certificate on a SBH at a time. When you install a new certificate on a SBH, you overwrite the existing certificate. You can run a SBH on your network with a self-signed certificate.

However, if you need to expose the SBH UI on a public network and have browsers that indicate a trusted site, you must get a signed certificate matching your domain name. You can acquire a valid signed certificate from your IT department or purchase it from a Public Certificate Authority (CA) using a certificate signing request (CSR). A certificate signed by a CA is used to establish a secure connection between your browser and the SBH.