• Our team is looking to connect with folks who use email services provided by Plesk, or a premium service. If you'd like to be part of the discovery process and share your experiences, we invite you to complete this short screening survey. If your responses match the persona we are looking for, you'll receive a link to schedule a call at your convenience. We look forward to hearing from you!
  • We are looking for U.S.-based freelancer or agency working with SEO or WordPress for a quick 30-min interviews to gather feedback on XOVI, a successful German SEO tool we’re looking to launch in the U.S.
    If you qualify and participate, you’ll receive a $30 Amazon gift card as a thank-you. Please apply here. Thanks for helping shape a better SEO product for agencies!
  • The BIND DNS server has already been deprecated and removed from Plesk for Windows.
    If a Plesk for Windows server is still using BIND, the upgrade to Plesk Obsidian 18.0.70 will be unavailable until the administrator switches the DNS server to Microsoft DNS. We strongly recommend transitioning to Microsoft DNS within the next 6 weeks, before the Plesk 18.0.70 release.
  • The Horde component is removed from Plesk Installer. We recommend switching to another webmail software supported in Plesk.

Resolved Apple devices loading default certificate instead of domain-specific one

Oldiesmann

Basic Pleskian
Over the past week or so, I've been getting reports from users on one of my forums that they are no longer able to access the site from their iPads.

Tonight with the help of a friend, we were finally able to track down the issue - iOS is trying to load the default security certificate rather than the one associated with the site itself, and then refusing to load the site since the security certificate was issued for the server's hostname, which is different than the domain this site is hosted on.

Given that this is only happening with iOS devices and I haven't changed anything with regards to the security certificates on the server, I'm guessing that it's an iOS issue, but I was wondering if anyone else is having this problem or if there's anything I can do to get around it.

If it makes any difference, Plesk is set to redirect from http to https automatically and all domains are secured with a free Let's Encrypt certificate (the default one is also a Let's Encrypt certificate, from the server pool).
 
Managed to get to the bottom of the problem it seems. I have nginx set up as a reverse proxy with Apache and recently enabled http2. Apparently this is causing nginx to send an upgrade header, which in turn causes problems for Safari/iOS. Adding "proxy-hide-header: upgrade;" to the nginx configuration fixed the issue.
 
Back
Top