On Mon, Mar 17, 2003 at 08:42:40AM +0100, Sven Hoexter wrote: > On Mon, Mar 17, 2003 at 04:14:22PM +1100, Rob Weir wrote: > > On Wed, Mar 12, 2003 at 01:57:19PM -0600, Rich Puhek wrote: > > Hi, > > > > I've started digging through the OpenSSL docs. Looks like all I need to > > > do is regenerate the certificate interactively, and specify the desired > > > hostname, overriding the default. Problem is, I'm not sure about any > > > other switches I'll need. > I suggest to read the mod_ssl and openssl faq, they are quite generic for > those issue. > > > > Is there a "Debian-way" to do this nice and cleanly? Has anyone else run > > > into (and solved) the issue? > > > > I'm not sure of an exact answer, but there is a 'mksslcert' program in > > Debian...I can't seem to find which package it's from, right now, but > > http://packages.debian.org/ will be able to tell you. > > After some digging I think you mean those two here: > > [EMAIL PROTECTED]:~$ zgrep sign.sh /tmp/Contents-i386.gz > usr/share/doc/libapache-mod-ssl/examples/sign.sh web/libapache-mod-ssl > > [EMAIL PROTECTED]:~$ zgrep makesslcert /tmp/Contents-i386.gz > usr/lib/linuxconf/lib/makesslcert.sh admin/linuxconf
Hm, that's odd, I'm fairly sure I've never had linuxconf installed. Oh well. I'm fairly sure the mod_ssl docs tell you how to use OpenSSL to create your certs anyway. -- Rob Weir <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> http://ertius.org/
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