Differences Between SSL Certificate Types
Huawei Cloud SCM provides Organization Validation (OV) and Extended Validation (EV) SSL certificates.
This topic describes the differences between different types of certificates.
Special enterprises cannot apply for OV or EV certificates. For example, military units, some government agencies, and national security departments.
To apply for OV and EV certificates, organizations must verify their identity through unified social credit code published on the national official website. While, special enterprises cannot verify their organization identity because there is no related details on that website.
Certificate Types
On the SCM console, you can buy DV, OV, and EV SSL certificates. Different types of certificates are recommended for different scenarios to meet varied trust and security strength requirements. For details, see
On the SCM console, you can buy OV, and EV SSL certificates. Different types of certificates are recommended for different scenarios to meet varied trust and security strength requirements. For details, see Differences between certificate types.
Certificate Type |
Security |
Validation Requirements |
Application Scenario |
Supported Certificate Authority |
Review Duration |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
OV |
High |
The CA follows a standard process to validate the organization identity and the domain name ownership. |
Service websites of education agencies, government departments, Internet companies, applications of small and medium-sized enterprises, and e-commerce platforms For example, Apple Store and WeChat applet. |
|
3 to 5 working days |
EV |
Highest |
CAs will verify the organization identity and the domain name ownership. |
Websites of large enterprises, institutions, and organizations with strict security requirements For example, financial institutions, insurance agencies, and banks. |
|
7 to 10 working days |
Certificate Authorities
Currently, you can buy SSL certificates issued by DigiCert only in CCM. For details, see the following table.
Certificate Authority |
Description |
SSL OV Certificates Supported |
SSL EV Certificates Supported |
---|---|---|---|
DigiCert |
DigiCert, formerly Symantec, is the world's largest CA. It provides services for more than 100,000 customers in over 150 countries and regions. Advantages: High security, stability, and compatibility. Suitable for digital transactions with high security requirements and widely used by financial institutions. |
Yes Single-domain, multiple-domain, and wildcard-domain certificates supported |
Yes Single-domain and multi-domain certificates supported |
Promotion activities
- Single domain names (using domain name www.a.com and root domain name a.com as an example)
- Wildcard domain name (using domain names *.a.com and *.a.b.com as an example)
Domain Name Types Supported in SCM
The following table describes how different types of SSL certificates are used for domain names.
Domain Type |
Description |
---|---|
Single domain |
Only a single domain can be associated with an SSL certificate. For example, example.com. |
Multiple domains |
Multiple domain names can be associated with an SSL certificate.
|
Wildcard domain |
Only one wildcard domain can be associated with an SSL certificate. Domain names having multiple wildcard characters, such as *.*.example.com, are not supported. Only one wildcard character is allowed in a wildcard domain name, for example, *.example.com, which may include domain names a.example.com, b.example.com, and more, but does not include a.a.example.com. |
Cryptographic Algorithms Supported in SCM
SSL certificates issued by CAs in CCM support RSA and ECC algorithms.
- Rivest–Shamir–Adleman (RSA) is an asymmetric cryptographic algorithm that is widely used around the world. It has the best compatibility among the three algorithms and supports mainstream browsers and all-platform OSs. Generally, RSA uses a 2048-bit or 3072-bit key.
- Elliptical curve cryptography (ECC) features faster encryption, higher efficiency, and lower server resource consumption compared with RSA. ECC is being promoted in mainstream browsers and is becoming a next-generation mainstream algorithm. Generally, ECC uses a 256-bit key.
For more details, see Cryptographic algorithms supported.
Certificate Authority |
Certificate Type |
Domain Type |
Cryptographic Algorithm |
---|---|---|---|
DigiCert |
OV |
Single domain |
RSA_2048, RSA_3072, and RSA_4096 |
Multiple domains |
RSA_2048, RSA_3072, and RSA_4096 |
||
Wildcard domain |
RSA_2048, RSA_3072, and RSA_4096 |
||
OV Pro |
Single domain |
RSA_2048, RSA_3072, RSA_4096, EC_P256, and EC_P384 |
|
Multiple domains |
RSA_2048, RSA_3072, RSA_4096, EC_P256, and EC_P384 |
||
Wildcard domain |
RSA_2048, RSA_3072, RSA_4096, EC_P256, and EC_P384 |
||
EV |
Single domain |
RSA_2048, RSA_3072, and RSA_4096 |
|
Multiple domains |
RSA_2048, RSA_3072, and RSA_4096 |
||
EV Pro |
Single domain |
RSA_2048, RSA_3072, RSA_4096, EC_P256, and EC_P384 |
|
Multiple domains |
RSA_2048, RSA_3072, RSA_4096, EC_P256, and EC_P384 |
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