For extra security to protect access to and use of a certificate's private key, you can use the master key of an IBM® Cryptographic Coprocessor to encrypt the private key and store the key in a special key file. You can select this key storage option as part of creating or renewing a certificate in Digital Certificate Manager (DCM).
Before you can use this option successfully, you must use the IBM Cryptographic Coprocessor configuration Web interface to create an appropriate keystore file. Also, you must use the coprocessor configuration Web interface to associate the keystore file with the coprocessor device description that you want to use. You can access the coprocessor configuration Web interface from the iSeries™ Tasks page.
If your system has more than one coprocessor device installed and varied on, you can choose to share the certificate's private key among multiple devices. In order for device descriptions to share the private key, all of the devices must have the same master key. The process for distributing the same master key to multiple devices is called cloning. Sharing the key among devices allows you to use Secure Sockets Layer (SSL) load balancing, which can improve performance for secure sessions.
Follow these steps from the Select a Key Storage Location page to use the coprocessor master key to encrypt the certificate's private key and store it in a special keystore file: