Per https://support.apple.com/en-us/HT211025
Quoting:
"In our ongoing efforts to improve web security for our users, Apple is reducing the maximum allowed lifetimes of TLS server certificates [to 398 days]"
- [...]
- "This change will not affect certificates issued from user-added or administrator-added Root CAs."
Questions:
- What defines "user-added or administrator-added Root CAs"?
- How do we get our hands on a version of Safari now to test/prepare for this change? What version(s) of Safari honors this change?
Note, I've asked a similar question on StackExchange: https://apple.stackexchange.com/questions/384033
Thank you for the follow up. I do not have anything new in to share in regards to a testing date for this change in Safari Technology Preview.
If are using a root that exists in the trust store already on the device I would plan for this change. If you are using a certificate from a user-added or administrator-added Root CAs, this change will not affect you.
| I'd also rest assured knowing that this stament is guaranteed to be correct:
|
| -- "This shorten validity period only affects certificates created with a root that
| already exists in the trust store of the device."
|
| Our certificate is generated just-in-time using a CA<--->intermediate<--->SSL to be
| compliant with Firefox, then installed using security add command line interface. It
| sholud not qualify as "Already existing in the trust store of the device", but having a
| way to confirm this prior to the change would vastly improve the confidence of our
| prodcut for the future of Safari.
Matt Eaton
DTS Engineering, CoreOS
meaton3 at apple.com