P12 to the
> Mozilla databases. If you want to use an industrial-strength tool
> for your certificates, either use DogTag or EJBCA.
>
> Arshad Noor
> StrongAuth, Inc.
>
> fat.fuck wrote:
> >> bebop$ /development/projects/dsrk52/lib/ldapcsdk/tools/ldapsearch -h
>
On Dec 3, 1:21 am, "fat.fuck" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On 3 Dec, 00:29, Eddy Nigg <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>
>
> > On 12/03/2008 02:20 AM, fat.fuck:
>
> > > i didn't explicitlly supply the certs' private key file location to
&
On 3 Dec, 00:29, Eddy Nigg <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On 12/03/2008 02:20 AM, fat.fuck:
>
>
>
> > i didn't explicitlly supply the certs' private key file location to
> > the certutil command line when i added the certs to cert7.db
> > (although,
On Dec 2, 11:02 pm, Rich Megginson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> fat.fuck wrote:
> > On Dec 2, 8:59 pm, "fat.fuck" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >> first off: i am but a humble java programmer by trade; not a sysadmin;
> >> nor a network guy.
On Dec 2, 8:59 pm, "fat.fuck" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> first off: i am but a humble java programmer by trade; not a sysadmin;
> nor a network guy. so a lot of nss tool-related stuff is a foreign
> language to me. please, help a certutil rookie make sense of the
>
first off: i am but a humble java programmer by trade; not a sysadmin;
nor a network guy. so a lot of nss tool-related stuff is a foreign
language to me. please, help a certutil rookie make sense of the
world?
i'm experimenting with using client authn between a command-line
ldapsearch client (for
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