Post Syndicated from Adina Lozada original https://aws.amazon.com/blogs/security/amazon-introduces-dynamic-intermediate-certificate-authorities/
AWS Certificate Manager (ACM) is a managed service that lets you provision, manage, and deploy public and private Secure Sockets Layer/Transport Layer Security (SSL/TLS) certificates for use with Amazon Web Services (AWS) and your internal connected resources. Starting October 11, 2022, at 9:00 AM Pacific Time, public certificates obtained through ACM will be issued from one of the multiple intermediate certificate authorities (CAs) that Amazon manages. In this blog post, we share important details about this change and how you can prepare.
What is changing and why?
Public certificates that you request through ACM are obtained from Amazon Trust Services, which is a public certificate authority (CA) that Amazon manages. Like other public CAs, Amazon Trust Services CAs have a structured trust hierarchy. The public certificate issued to you, also known as the leaf certificate, can chain to one or more intermediate CAs and then to the Amazon Trust Services root CA. The Amazon Trust Services root CA is trusted by default by most and operating systems. This is why Amazon can issue public certificates that are trusted by these systems.
Starting October 11, 2022 at 9:00 AM Pacific Time, public certificates obtained through ACM will be issued from one of the multiple intermediate CAs that Amazon manages. These intermediate CAs chain to an existing Amazon Trust Services root CA. With this change, leaf certificates issued to you will be signed by different intermediate CAs. Before this change, Amazon maintained a limited number of intermediate CAs and issued and renewed certificates from the same intermediate CAs.
Amazon is making this change to create a more resilient and agile certificate infrastructure that will help us respond more quickly to future requirements. This change also presents an opportunity to correct a known issue related to delayed revocation of a subordinate CA and help minimize the scope of impact for new risks that might emerge in the future.
What can I do to prepare?
Most customers won’t experience an impact from this change. Browsers and most applications will continue to work just as they do now, because these services trust the Amazon Trust Services root CA and not a specific intermediate CA. If you’re using one of the standard operating systems and web browsers that are listed in the next section of this post, you don’t need to take any action.
If you use intermediate CA information through certificate pinning, you will need to make changes and pin to an Amazon Trust Services root CA instead of an intermediate CA or leaf certificate. Certificate pinning is a process in which your application that initiates the TLS connection only trusts a specific public certificate through one or more certificate variables that you define. If the pinned certificate is replaced, your application won’t initiate the connection. AWS recommends that you don’t use certificate pinning because it introduces an availability risk. However, if your use case requires certificate pinning, AWS recommends that you pin to an Amazon Trust Services root CA instead of an intermediate CA or leaf certificate. When you pin to an Amazon Trust Services root CA, you should pin to all of the root CAs shown in the following table.
Amazon Trust Services root CA certificates
Distinguished name | SHA-256 hash of subject public key information | Test URL |
CN=Amazon Root CA 1,O=Amazon,C=US |
fbe3018031f9586bcbf41727e417b7d1c45c2f47f93be372a17b96b50757d5a2 | Test URL |
CN=Amazon Root CA 2,O=Amazon,C=US |
7f4296fc5b6a4e3b35d3c369623e364ab1af381d8fa7121533c9d6c633ea2461 | Test URL |
CN=Amazon Root CA 3,O=Amazon,C=US |
36abc32656acfc645c61b71613c4bf21c787f5cabbee48348d58597803d7abc9 | Test URL |
CN=Amazon Root CA 4,O=Amazon,C=US |
f7ecded5c66047d28ed6466b543c40e0743abe81d109254dcf845d4c2c7853c5 | Test URL |
To test that your trust store contains the Amazon Trust Services root CA, see the preceding table, which lists the Amazon Trust Services root CA certificates, and choose each test URL in the table. If the test URL works, you should see a message that says Expected Status: Good, along with the certificate chain. If the test URL doesn’t work, you will receive an error message that indicates the connection has failed.
What should I do if the Amazon Trust Services CAs are not in my trust store?
If your application is using a custom trust store, you must add the Amazon Trust Services root CAs to your application’s trust store. The instructions for doing this vary based on the application or service. Refer to the documentation for the application or service that you’re using.
If your tests of any of the test URLs failed, you must update your trust store. The simplest way to update your trust store is to upgrade the operating system or browser that you’re using.
The following operating systems use the Amazon Trust Services CAs:
- Amazon Linux (all versions)
- Microsoft Windows versions, with updates installed, from January 2005, Windows Vista, Windows 7, Windows Server 2008, and newer versions
- Mac OS X 10.4 with Java for Mac OS X 10.4 Release 5, Mac OS X 10.5, and newer versions
- Red Hat Enterprise Linux 5 (March 2007 release), Linux 6, and Linux 7 and CentOS 5, CentOS 6, and CentOS 7
- Ubuntu 8.10
- Debian 5.0
- Java 1.4.2_12, Java 5 update 2, and all newer versions, including Java 6, Java 7, and Java 8
Modern browsers trust Amazon Trust Services CAs. To update the certificate bundle in your browser, update your browser. For instructions on how to update your browser, see the update page for your browser:
- Chrome
- Firefox
- Safari
- The Windows operating system manages certificate bundles for Internet Explorer and Microsoft Edge, so to update your browser, you must update Windows.
Where can I get help?
If you have questions, contact AWS Support or your technical account manager (TAM), or start a new thread on the AWS re:Post ACM Forum. If you have feedback about this post, submit comments in the Comments section below.
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