Updated 0845 UTC 2 October 2021 with link.Īn expiring root certificate has to be very low on the list of actual issues people wishing to get real use out of such an ancient system must fight continuously. Thanks to for drawing attention to this, and to Peter for the link. Whether you’re running a server which relies on Let’s Encrypt certificates, or trying to connect your browser to one, the most helpful and information page on the subject is this one from Certify The Web. This not only affects Safari, but also third-party apps which use parts of WebKit to connect to websites. Full details are in this article, which explains what you can do to address that. Versions from 10.12 (Sierra) to 12 beta (Monterey), and all recent versions of iOS and iPadOS may refuse to load an affected site, claiming that their intermediate and root certificates are out of date, despite the updated root certificate being present. This certificate expiry doesn’t only affect older versions of macOS.
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It may be possible to make changes within the root certificates to work around this: details are given in that article.Īlthough this specific problem shouldn’t affect any Mac which has been updated to a version of Mac OS X or macOS later than 10.12.2, all later versions of macOS are prone to a related problem… Although later versions of Mac OS X and macOS have had replacement root certificates installed, those aren’t in older versions of Mac OS X, nor in iOS prior to version 10. This is relied on by Let’s Encrypt security certificates.
The reason, explained in full detail by Scott Helme, is that a widely used root security certificate, that for IdenTrust DST Root CA X3, will expire in just over a week, on 30 September. If you’re still running El Capitan, or any version of Mac OS X prior to 10.12.1, then you’re about to run into problems with some popular security certificates.