Install All Certificates For Cac Reader Mac

Install All Certificates For Cac Reader Mac 3,7/5 8114 reviews

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The official site of the DOD Common Access Card. Managing Your CAC CAC Security Developer Resources. CAC smart card reader requirements (as of August 2007).

There is a lot of information out in the wild about how you can get your CAC to work on your Mac, and all the certificates you need to have installed in your Keychain in order to do so. My goal in this forum entry is to clarify and help you understand what it is you're doing with these certificates and why. NOTE: If you wish to start with a Keychain free of any dod certificates, search your login and system keychains for any DOD Root, DOD ID, DOD ID SW, and DOD EMAIL certificates, then delete them. The Mac OS relies heavily on the information you put in the Keychain. When you're installing the various DOD certificates into the Keychain, you're essentially telling the Mac OS how it should handle the certificate and any certificates issued by that server.

Of the various DOD certs, the most important will be the DOD Root certs. A root certificate is the top-most certificate of the tree, which means all other certificates further down the tree depend on the trustworthiness of the root.

As long as you have the correct DOD Root CA certs installed, trusted, and don't have any duplicates, the rest of the various DOD certs shouldn't show any issues of validation in your Keychain. This has become even more important since macOS High Sierra was released.

I have seen situations where users do not get prompted to select a certificate or enter their PIN, or only see a 'com.apple.idms.' Certificate in the selection window. My best conclusion is that the Keychain is unable to determine the validity of the CAC certificates, and therefore do not allow you to select them for authentication.

Now let's get started by adding the DoD Root CA certs into your Keychain. Use the following links to download the certificates, and then drag them into your 'System' Keychain: Once they are in your Keychain, they will most likely have a red x next to them. Open each certificate individually, tap the arrow next to the Trust Settings, click the first drop down menu and select Always Trust, then close the Window and enter your Mac password when prompted. If you have any DOD Root CA certificates with blue around the border of the certificate icon, delete those as well. Once you have done this to all of your DOD Root certs, they should look like this. DOD Root Certs Screen Shot 2017-12-12 at 7.37.22 AM.png (27.06 KiB) Viewed 8836 times You can now use to download the remainder of the DOD certificates. This one file contains several DOD ID, DOD ID SW, and DOD EMAIL certificates.

Certificates

This one file can also be dragged into your System Keychain. Seeing that we trusted the root certs in the previous step, there is no need to manually trust these certs, and you can confirm this by selecting a certificate and viewing the certificate summary at the top of the window. You should see a green dot with a check and text that says 'This certificate is valid'.