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Connection encryption troubleshooting in the ODBC driver

Certificate chain errors

If you see "SSL Provider: The certificate chain was issued by an authority that is not trusted." or "SSL routines::certificate verify failed: unable to get local issuer certificate" in your error:

  • Connection encryption is enabled by default in version 18 and newer. Users switching from previous versions of ODBC might see these errors if connection encryption was previously not used.
  • Users can choose to set the Encrypt connection string keyword to no/optional to disable connection encryption to match the default behavior prior to version 18. In the DSN Configuration UI, this option is set using the Connection Encryption dropdown list.
  • If connection encryption is desired, TrustServerCertificate can also be set to yes to skip server certificate validation.

Certificate name errors

If you see "SSL Provider: The target principal name is incorrect." or "SSL routines::certificate verify failed:subject name does not match host name" in your error:

  • Users might see this error if the host name in the certificate returned by the server doesn't match what is expected. By default, the server name is used to check against the certificate.
  • The HostNameInCertificate keyword can be used to specify the name expected from the server certificate.
  • Alternatively, a certificate can also be specified to match and verify the returned server certificate against by using the ServerCertificate keyword (v18.1+).
  • You might also use TrustServerCertificate to skip server certificate validation.

For more information, see DSN and Connection String Keywords and Attributes.