pub enum CertUsage {
CA,
Service,
TrustAnchor,
DomainIssued,
Unassigned(u8),
Private,
}
Expand description
RFC 6698, DNS-Based Authentication for TLS
2.1.1. The Certificate Usage Field
A one-octet value, called "certificate usage", specifies the provided
association that will be used to match the certificate presented in
the TLS handshake. This value is defined in a new IANA registry (see
Section 7.2) in order to make it easier to add additional certificate
usages in the future. The certificate usages defined in this
document are:
0 -- CA
1 -- Service
2 -- TrustAnchor
3 -- DomainIssued
The certificate usages defined in this document explicitly only apply
to PKIX-formatted certificates in DER encoding [X.690]. If TLS
allows other formats later, or if extensions to this RRtype are made
that accept other formats for certificates, those certificates will
need their own certificate usage values.
Variants§
CA
0 -- Certificate usage 0 is used to specify a CA certificate, or
the public key of such a certificate, that MUST be found in any of
the PKIX certification paths for the end entity certificate given
by the server in TLS. This certificate usage is sometimes
referred to as "CA constraint" because it limits which CA can be
used to issue certificates for a given service on a host. The
presented certificate MUST pass PKIX certification path
validation, and a CA certificate that matches the TLSA record MUST
be included as part of a valid certification path. Because this
certificate usage allows both trust anchors and CA certificates,
the certificate might or might not have the basicConstraints
extension present.
Service
1 -- Certificate usage 1 is used to specify an end entity
certificate, or the public key of such a certificate, that MUST be
matched with the end entity certificate given by the server in
TLS. This certificate usage is sometimes referred to as "service
certificate constraint" because it limits which end entity
certificate can be used by a given service on a host. The target
certificate MUST pass PKIX certification path validation and MUST
match the TLSA record.
TrustAnchor
2 -- Certificate usage 2 is used to specify a certificate, or the
public key of such a certificate, that MUST be used as the trust
anchor when validating the end entity certificate given by the
server in TLS. This certificate usage is sometimes referred to as
"trust anchor assertion" and allows a domain name administrator to
specify a new trust anchor -- for example, if the domain issues
its own certificates under its own CA that is not expected to be
in the end users' collection of trust anchors. The target
certificate MUST pass PKIX certification path validation, with any
certificate matching the TLSA record considered to be a trust
anchor for this certification path validation.
DomainIssued
3 -- Certificate usage 3 is used to specify a certificate, or the
public key of such a certificate, that MUST match the end entity
certificate given by the server in TLS. This certificate usage is
sometimes referred to as "domain-issued certificate" because it
allows for a domain name administrator to issue certificates for a
domain without involving a third-party CA. The target certificate
MUST match the TLSA record. The difference between certificate
usage 1 and certificate usage 3 is that certificate usage 1
requires that the certificate pass PKIX validation, but PKIX
validation is not tested for certificate usage 3.
Unassigned(u8)
Unassigned at the time of this implementation
Private
Private usage
Trait Implementations§
source§impl PartialEq<CertUsage> for CertUsage
impl PartialEq<CertUsage> for CertUsage
impl Copy for CertUsage
impl Eq for CertUsage
impl StructuralEq for CertUsage
impl StructuralPartialEq for CertUsage
Auto Trait Implementations§
impl RefUnwindSafe for CertUsage
impl Send for CertUsage
impl Sync for CertUsage
impl Unpin for CertUsage
impl UnwindSafe for CertUsage
Blanket Implementations§
source§impl<T> BorrowMut<T> for Twhere
T: ?Sized,
impl<T> BorrowMut<T> for Twhere T: ?Sized,
source§fn borrow_mut(&mut self) -> &mut T
fn borrow_mut(&mut self) -> &mut T
Mutably borrows from an owned value. Read more