Dell Powerconnect W-ClearPass Virtual Appliances W-ClearPass Guest 6.0 Deploym - Page 132

Resolution, be the Web server's SSL certificate if it is a self-signed certificate

Page 132 highlights

Resolution: When using HTTPS for device provisioning, you must obtain a commercial SSL certificate. Self-signed SSL certificates, and SSL server certificates that have been issued by an untrusted or unknown root certificate authority, will cause iOS device provisioning to fail with the message "The server certificate for ... is invalid". A workaround for this issue is to install an appropriate root certificate on the iOS device. This root certificate must be the Web server's SSL certificate (if it is a self-signed certificate), or the certificate authority that issued the SSL certificate. This is not recommended for production deployments as it increases the complexity of deployment for users with iOS devices. 132 | Onboard Troubleshooting Dell Networking W-ClearPass Guest 6.0 | Deployment Guide

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132
| Onboard Troubleshooting
Dell Networking W-ClearPass Guest 6.0 | Deployment Guide
Resolution:
When using HTTPS for device provisioning, you
must
obtain a commercial SSL certificate.
Self-signed SSL certificates, and SSL server certificates that have been issued by an untrusted or unknown root
certificate authority, will cause iOS device provisioning to fail with the message “The server certificate for … is
invalid”.
A workaround for this issue is to install an appropriate root certificate on the iOS device. This root certificate must
be the Web server’s SSL certificate (if it is a self-signed certificate), or the certificate authority that issued the SSL
certificate. This is not recommended for production deployments as it increases the complexity of deployment for
users with iOS devices.