Sponsored Content
Homework and Emergencies Emergency UNIX and Linux Support Self signed ca-bundle.crt expired Post 302912070 by Perderabo on Tuesday 5th of August 2014 01:46:19 PM
Old 08-05-2014
I would not cat the new certificate onto the end of the old certificate. I would rename the old certificate to a save file. Then I would just move the new certificate in place.
This User Gave Thanks to Perderabo For This Post:
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. UNIX Desktop Questions & Answers

change CRT resolution

Hello I want change my CRT resolution from 1152x900x** to 1280x1024x75 on a Solaris platform but I try "/usr/sbin/m64config" and "/usr/sbin/ffbconfig" command, the both commands failed :-( In the /dev/fbs/ directory there is juste one file : cgsix0 have you got a solution to my customer... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: ggenevrier
1 Replies

2. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Cannot backspace on my session in CRT

Hi, when I make a mistake and then try to backspace I am unable to do so . Can someone please suggest How I can correct this on my session For Eg: pwd^H^H^H Thanks rooh (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: rooh
2 Replies

3. Shell Programming and Scripting

please can any one help me bundle several files into one

#!/bin/sh #call function from loop filevalidate() { case $# in 0) echo "usage enshar file1 file2 ... > outputfile ! " >/deb/sterr ;; *) for filename do if ; then echo "invalid pathname > try bin " $filename >/dev/stderr exit 1 fi if ; then echo "is a directory!"... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: swissnez
5 Replies

4. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

So, like, I signed on with a new hosting company...

... and there was absolutely nothing installed except fedora and ssh. I used yum to install vsftp and httpd, both start and ps shows they're running, and yet I can't connect with either of them. Where on earth or in redhat do I begin looking to unravel this one? I've overseen a server before but... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: Bobby
3 Replies

5. Solaris

Blank screen on crt

Hello I'm new in sun and i have a liitle problem. I buy sun enterprise 420r and connect keyboard and monitor crt (non Sun). But when i start server i have blank screen on crt. I'm new in sun servers and i dont know why its doin this. (11 Replies)
Discussion started by: elmik
11 Replies

6. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

"Signed Linux" - Only executing signed programs

Hey folks, not sure whether this or the security board is the right forum. If I failed, please move :) So here's the problem: I need to build a Linux environment in which only "signed" processes are allowed to run. When I say signed I don't mean a VeriSign signature like you know it from... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: disaster
5 Replies

7. Programming

[ASM] Adding SIGNED numbers?

Hi guys, I want to add a list of SIGNED numbers... but I don't know how to tell the computer to ADD THEM as signed, let me explain further: when adding 200 + (-100) , it becomes 100, but in asm the computer always add them as unsigned, so I always get the 300. Do I have to add them in a... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: lamachejo
4 Replies

8. Programming

Signed and unsigned intergers

when a date type is considered signed and unsigned is that simple referring to - for signed and positive numbers for unsigned? Further if that is the case would mutiplying and dividing ect where 2 signed numbers, like (-2)*(-2) = 4 result in a unsigned. (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: Fingerz
3 Replies

9. Shell Programming and Scripting

How to extract certs from apache ca-bundle.crt file?

Apache web server reads Certificate Authority(CA) certs from ../cert/ca-bundle.crt file for SSL authentication. It has all certs in PEM format and no way to know exactly what they are. I want to get each cert seperated by boundary strings into a file and feed it to "keytool" command to see what... (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: kchinnam
7 Replies

10. OS X (Apple)

Unsigned to signed, error?...

Hi guys... Macbook Pro, 13", circa August 2012, OSX 10.7.5, default bash terminal. I require the capability to convert +32767 to -32768 into signed hex words... The example piece code below works perfectly except... #/bin/bash # sign.sh # Unsign to sign... while true do # I have used... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: wisecracker
2 Replies
lprng_certs(1)							lprng_certs command						    lprng_certs(1)

NAME
lprng_certs - lprng SSL certificate management SYNOPSIS
lprng_certs option Options: init - make directory structure newca - make new root CA defaults - set new default values for certs gen - generate user, server, or signing cert index [dir] - index cert files verify [cert] - verify cert file encrypt keyfile - set or change keyfile password DESCRIPTION
The lprng_certs program is used to manage SSL certificates for the LPRng software. There SSL certificate structure consists of a hierarchy of certificates. The LPRng software assumes that the following types of certificates will be used: CA or root A top level or self-signed certificate. signing A certificate that can be used to sign other certificates. This is signed by the root CA or another signing certificate. user A certificate used by a user to identify themselves to the lpd server. server A certificate used by the lpd server to identify themselves to the user or other lpd servers. Signing Certificates All of the signing certificates, including the root certificate (root CA), /etc/lprng/ssl.ca/ca.crt, are in the same directory as the root CA file. Alternately, all of the signing certs can be concatenated and put into a single file, which by convention is assumed to have the same name as the root CA file, /etc/lprng/ssl.ca/ca.crt. The ssl_ca_file, ssl_ca_path, and ssl_ca_key printcap and configuration options can be used to specify the locations of the root CA files, a directory containing the signing certificate files, and the private key file for the root CA file respectively. The root certificate (root CA file) /etc/lprng/ssl.ca/ca.crt has a private key file /etc/lprng/ssl.ca/ca.key as well. By convention, the private keys for the other signing certificate files are stored in the certificate file. The OpenSSL software requires that this directory also contain a set of hash files which are, in effect, links to these files. By default, all signing certificates are assumed to be in the same directory as the root certificate. Server Certificates The certificate used by the lpd server are kept in another directory. These files do not need to have hash links to them. By convention, the private keys for these certificate files are stored in the certificate file. The server certificate file is specified by the ssl_server_cert and has the default value /etc/lprng/ssl.server/server.crt. This file contains the cert and private key. The server cer- tificate password file is specified by the ssl_server_password option with the default value and contains the password used to decrypt the servers private key and use it for authentication. This key file should be read only by the lpd server. User Certificates The certificates used by users are kept in a separate directory in the users home directory. By convention, the private keys for these certificate files are stored in the certificate file. The user certificate file is specified by the LPR_SSL_FILE environment variable, otherwise the ${HOME}/.lpr/client.crt is used. The pass- word is taken from the file specified by the LPR_SSL_PASSWORD environment variable, otherwise the ${HOME}/.lpr/client.pwd file is read. USING LPRNG_CERTS The organization of the SSL certificates used by LPRng is similar to that used by other programs such as the Apache mod_ssl support. The lprng_certs program is used to create the directory structure, create certificates for the root CA, signing, user and servers. In order to make management simple, the following support is provided. lprng_certs init This command creates the directories used by the lpd server. It is useful when setting up a new lpd server. lprng_certs newca This command creates a self-signed certificate, suitable for use as a root CA certificate. It also sets up a set of default values for other certificate creation. lprng_certs defaults This command is used to modify the set of default values. The default values are listed and should be self-explanatory, except for the value of the signer certificate. By default, the root CA can be used to sign certificates. However, a signing certificate can be used as well. This allows delegation of signing authority without compromising the security of the root CA. lprng_certs gen This is used to generate a user, server, or signing certificate. lprng_certs index This is used to create the indexes for the signing certificates. lprng_certs verify [cert] This checks the certificate file using the Openssl openssl verify command. lprng_certs encrypt keyfile This removes all key information from the key file, reencrypts the key information, and the puts the encrypted key information in the file. LPRng OPTIONS Option Purpose ssl_ca_path directory holding the SSL signing certs ssl_ca_file file holding the root CA or all SSL signing certs ssl_server_cert cert file for the server ssl_server_password file containing password for server server ${HOME}/.lpr/client.crt client certificate file ${HOME}/.lpr/client.pwd client certificate private key password ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES
LPR_SSL_FILE client certificate file LPR_SSL_PASSWORD client certificate private key password EXIT STATUS
The following exit values are returned: zero (0) Successful completion. non-zero (!=0) An error occurred. SEE ALSO
lpd.conf(5), lpc(8), lpd(8), checkpc(8), lpr(1), lpq(1), lprm(1), printcap(5), lpd.conf(5), pr(1), lprng_certs(1), lprng_index_certs(1). AUTHOR
Patrick Powell <papowell@lprng.com>. HISTORY
LPRng is a enhanced printer spooler system with functionality similar to the Berkeley LPR software. The LPRng developer mailing list is lprng-devel@lists.sourceforge.net; subscribe by visiting https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/lprng-devel or sending mail to lprng- request@lists.sourceforge.net with the word subscribe in the body. The software is available via http://lprng.sourceforge.net LPRng 2006-12-09 lprng_certs(1)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 09:49 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy