Các câu trả lời gần đây cho Problematic Certificates on my server i can't access ithttps://support.mozilla.org/vi/questions/11666952017-07-27T02:40:45-07:00daaaaym you have no idea how happy i'm it's been more than month or 2 since i accessed my website fr2017-07-27T02:40:45-07:00cezart44https://support.mozilla.org/vi/questions/1166695?page=3#answer-990735<p>daaaaym you have no idea how happy i'm it's been more than month or 2 since i accessed my website from firefox , thank you so much for at least trying to help, my kind man, god bless you and your family.
</p>i did reinstall firefox and after i done it asked me if i want to restore the settings to the defaul2017-07-27T02:38:27-07:00cezart44https://support.mozilla.org/vi/questions/1166695?page=3#answer-990734<p>i did reinstall firefox and after i done it asked me if i want to restore the settings to the defaults so i clicked ok, and wooohooo it finally worked
</p>jscher2000 said
Do the exceptions work in Internet Explorer 11 and Google Chrome? If so, there's r2017-07-27T02:01:43-07:00cezart44https://support.mozilla.org/vi/questions/1166695?page=3#answer-990723<p><em>jscher2000 <a href="#answer-990718" rel="nofollow">said</a></em>
</p>
<blockquote>
Do the exceptions work in Internet Explorer 11 and Google Chrome? If so, there's recent feature to set Firefox to trust certificates in the Windows system-level Certificate Store:
(1) In a new tab, type or paste <strong>about:config</strong> in the address bar and press Enter/Return. Click the button promising to be careful.
(2) In the search box above the list, type or paste <strong>roots</strong> and pause while the list is filtered
(3) Double-click the <strong>security.enterprise_roots.enabled</strong> preference to switch the value from false to true
If it works, Firefox then would piggyback on the system certificate store.
</blockquote>
<p>i did what you said, it did not work, on internet explorer it does not work too, but in google chrome it work and on opera work too...
</p>Do the exceptions work in Internet Explorer 11 and Google Chrome? If so, there's recent feature to s2017-07-27T01:48:22-07:00jscher2000https://support.mozilla.org/vi/questions/1166695?page=3#answer-990718<p>Do the exceptions work in Internet Explorer 11 and Google Chrome? If so, there's recent feature to set Firefox to trust certificates in the Windows system-level Certificate Store:
</p><p>(1) In a new tab, type or paste <strong>about:config</strong> in the address bar and press Enter/Return. Click the button promising to be careful.
</p><p>(2) In the search box above the list, type or paste <strong>roots</strong> and pause while the list is filtered
</p><p>(3) Double-click the <strong>security.enterprise_roots.enabled</strong> preference to switch the value from false to true
</p><p>If it works, Firefox then would piggyback on the system certificate store.
</p>man there is something wrong with firefox itself, i added the exception million times, it should wor2017-07-26T18:42:13-07:00cezart44https://support.mozilla.org/vi/questions/1166695?page=3#answer-990616<p>man there is something wrong with firefox itself, i added the exception million times, it should work right away, do update your software, the problem from your side, not from my side....
</p>i tried what you told me but still the same problem, my page won't load at all....
2017-07-26T18:09:30-07:00cezart44https://support.mozilla.org/vi/questions/1166695?page=3#answer-990610<p>i tried what you told me but still the same problem, my page won't load at all....
</p>cezart44 said
jscher2000 said
I don't have any new tools/solutions on Firefox's side. You know ho2017-07-26T17:57:03-07:00cezart44https://support.mozilla.org/vi/questions/1166695?page=2#answer-990607<p><em>cezart44 <a href="#answer-986918" rel="nofollow">said</a></em>
</p>
<blockquote>
<em>jscher2000 <a href="#answer-985268" rel="nofollow">said</a></em>
<blockquote>
I don't have any new tools/solutions on Firefox's side. You know how Firefox works with SSL.
If IP address exceptions are problematic, maybe you should create a hostname for your server? Perhaps adding that to the Windows hosts file will make the exceptions work more smoothly.
</blockquote>
<p>how to do this?
</p>
</blockquote>
<p>i already have hostname and i know where windows hosts file but i forgot how to add host name, i'm not running my server from my home, i rent from hosting company,,, you know this is big problem, still not fixed...
</p>jscher2000 said
I don't have any new tools/solutions on Firefox's side. You know how Firefox works2017-07-14T17:24:58-07:00cezart44https://support.mozilla.org/vi/questions/1166695?page=2#answer-986918<p><em>jscher2000 <a href="#answer-985268" rel="nofollow">said</a></em>
</p>
<blockquote>
I don't have any new tools/solutions on Firefox's side. You know how Firefox works with SSL.
If IP address exceptions are problematic, maybe you should create a hostname for your server? Perhaps adding that to the Windows hosts file will make the exceptions work more smoothly.
</blockquote>
<p>how to do this?
</p>cezart44 said
it work but it take at least 30 minutes to load 1 page ( didn't change hostname or i2017-07-14T15:05:08-07:00jscher2000https://support.mozilla.org/vi/questions/1166695?page=2#answer-986903<p><em>cezart44 <a href="#answer-986900" rel="nofollow">said</a></em>
</p>
<blockquote>
it work but it take at least 30 minutes to load 1 page ( didn't change hostname or ip ) i just re added exception again....
</blockquote>
<p>I think that is a different problem. If you watch the Network Monitor, can you see a particular request that is stalling?
</p><p><a href="https://developer.mozilla.org/docs/Tools/Network_Monitor" rel="nofollow">https://developer.mozilla.org/docs/Tools/Network_Monitor</a>
</p>it work but it take at least 30 minutes to load 1 page ( didn't change hostname or ip ) i just re ad2017-07-14T14:31:41-07:00cezart44https://support.mozilla.org/vi/questions/1166695?page=2#answer-986900<p>it work but it take at least 30 minutes to load 1 page ( didn't change hostname or ip ) i just re added exception again....
</p>jscher2000 said
I don't have any new tools/solutions on Firefox's side. You know how Firefox works2017-07-13T18:38:21-07:00cezart44https://support.mozilla.org/vi/questions/1166695?page=2#answer-986676<p><em>jscher2000 <a href="#answer-985268" rel="nofollow">said</a></em>
</p>
<blockquote>
I don't have any new tools/solutions on Firefox's side. You know how Firefox works with SSL.
If IP address exceptions are problematic, maybe you should create a hostname for your server? Perhaps adding that to the Windows hosts file will make the exceptions work more smoothly.
</blockquote>
<p>not working, it disconnect me from firefox..couldn't open any page after doing this
</p>I don't have any new tools/solutions on Firefox's side. You know how Firefox works with SSL.
If IP 2017-07-09T17:18:29-07:00jscher2000https://support.mozilla.org/vi/questions/1166695?page=2#answer-985268<p>I don't have any new tools/solutions on Firefox's side. You know how Firefox works with SSL.
</p><p>If IP address exceptions are problematic, maybe you should create a hostname for your server? Perhaps adding that to the Windows hosts file will make the exceptions work more smoothly.
</p>it's not working again...
2017-07-09T16:19:37-07:00cezart44https://support.mozilla.org/vi/questions/1166695?page=2#answer-985257<p>it's not working again...
</p>bingoooo, it worked..thanks a millon
2017-07-09T11:19:33-07:00cezart44https://support.mozilla.org/vi/questions/1166695?page=2#answer-985221<p>bingoooo, it worked..thanks a millon
</p>oh no sorry... i mean i changed it from chrom, but the problem still not fixed....
2017-07-09T11:08:27-07:00cezart44https://support.mozilla.org/vi/questions/1166695?page=2#answer-985218<p>oh no sorry... i mean i changed it from chrom, but the problem still not fixed....
</p>well my kind man, now it worked, thank you i changed the URL from Firefox it self, everything now wo2017-07-09T11:05:50-07:00cezart44https://support.mozilla.org/vi/questions/1166695?page=2#answer-985217<p>well my kind man, now it worked, thank you i changed the URL from Firefox it self, everything now working fine, thank you a lot
</p>jscher2000 said
cezart44 said
...the last 2 weeks it kept crashing, maybe there is something wrong2017-07-09T11:01:16-07:00cezart44https://support.mozilla.org/vi/questions/1166695?page=2#answer-985216<p><em>jscher2000 <a href="#answer-985213" rel="nofollow">said</a></em>
</p>
<blockquote>
<em>cezart44 <a href="#answer-985211" rel="nofollow">said</a></em>
<blockquote>...the last 2 weeks it kept crashing, maybe there is something wrong or bug with the last update i dont know</blockquote>
<p>Could I suggest starting a new question about the crashes? This one's already onto the second page, so you'll get more help with a new question.
</p><p>You can start a new question at the following link. Scroll down past the suggestions to continue submitting your question: <a href="https://support.mozilla.org/questions/new/desktop/fix-problems" rel="nofollow">https://support.mozilla.org/questions/new/desktop/fix-problems</a>
</p><p>And to supplement your description of the problem:
</p><p><strong>Report IDs?</strong> If you are getting the Mozilla Crash Reporter form, your Firefox may have logged some data that would help track down the cause of the problem. You can submit that data to Mozilla and share it with forum volunteers to see whether it points to the solution. Please check the support article "<a href="/en-US/kb/firefox-crashes-asking-support" rel="nofollow">Firefox crashes - asking for support</a>" for steps to get those crash report IDs from the about:crashes page, and then post some of the recent ones here.
</p><p><strong>Safe Mode?</strong> Could you test in Firefox's Safe Mode? That temporarily deactivates extensions, hardware acceleration, and some other advanced features of Firefox that might make it more prone to crashing on some systems.
</p><p><em>If Firefox is not running:</em> Hold down the Shift key when starting Firefox.
</p><p><em>If Firefox is running:</em> You can restart Firefox in Safe Mode using either:
</p>
<ul><li> "3-bar" menu button &gt; "?" button &gt; Restart with Add-ons Disabled
</li><li> Help menu &gt; Restart with Add-ons Disabled
</li></ul>
<p>and OK the restart.
</p><p><em>Both scenarios:</em> A small dialog should appear. Click "Start in Safe Mode" (<em>not</em> Refresh).
</p><p>Any less crashy?
</p>
</blockquote>
<p>ok, now i changed the URL of my control panel, it did let me log in my control panel after doing this but not my whole panel just my emails...
</p>cezart44 said
...the last 2 weeks it kept crashing, maybe there is something wrong or bug with the 2017-07-09T10:51:14-07:00jscher2000https://support.mozilla.org/vi/questions/1166695?page=2#answer-985213<p><em>cezart44 <a href="#answer-985211" rel="nofollow">said</a></em>
</p>
<blockquote>...the last 2 weeks it kept crashing, maybe there is something wrong or bug with the last update i dont know</blockquote>
<p>Could I suggest starting a new question about the crashes? This one's already onto the second page, so you'll get more help with a new question.
</p><p>You can start a new question at the following link. Scroll down past the suggestions to continue submitting your question: <a href="https://support.mozilla.org/questions/new/desktop/fix-problems" rel="nofollow">https://support.mozilla.org/questions/new/desktop/fix-problems</a>
</p><p>And to supplement your description of the problem:
</p><p><strong>Report IDs?</strong> If you are getting the Mozilla Crash Reporter form, your Firefox may have logged some data that would help track down the cause of the problem. You can submit that data to Mozilla and share it with forum volunteers to see whether it points to the solution. Please check the support article "<a href="/en-US/kb/firefox-crashes-asking-support" rel="nofollow">Firefox crashes - asking for support</a>" for steps to get those crash report IDs from the about:crashes page, and then post some of the recent ones here.
</p><p><strong>Safe Mode?</strong> Could you test in Firefox's Safe Mode? That temporarily deactivates extensions, hardware acceleration, and some other advanced features of Firefox that might make it more prone to crashing on some systems.
</p><p><em>If Firefox is not running:</em> Hold down the Shift key when starting Firefox.
</p><p><em>If Firefox is running:</em> You can restart Firefox in Safe Mode using either:
</p>
<ul><li> "3-bar" menu button &gt; "?" button &gt; Restart with Add-ons Disabled
</li><li> Help menu &gt; Restart with Add-ons Disabled
</li></ul>
<p>and OK the restart.
</p><p><em>Both scenarios:</em> A small dialog should appear. Click "Start in Safe Mode" (<em>not</em> Refresh).
</p><p>Any less crashy?
</p>actually i like firefox more than any browser, i been using it for ages without problems that's why 2017-07-09T10:40:46-07:00cezart44https://support.mozilla.org/vi/questions/1166695?page=2#answer-985211<p>actually i like firefox more than any browser, i been using it for ages without problems that's why you see me interested in fixing the problem.., i almost gave up but the good thing is that i'm able to access any other websites without problems but not my server address, but the last 2 weeks it kept crashing, maybe there is something wrong or bug with the last update i dont know
...
</p>cezart44 said
what if firefox trying to access port 443 instead of 8888?
You would need another e2017-07-09T10:40:05-07:00jscher2000https://support.mozilla.org/vi/questions/1166695?page=2#answer-985210<p><em>cezart44 <a href="#answer-985205" rel="nofollow">said</a></em>
</p>
<blockquote>
what if firefox trying to access port 443 instead of 8888?
</blockquote>
<p>You would need another exception for that hostname:portnumber combination.
</p>