> From: owner-openssl-us...@openssl.org On Behalf Of Jakob Bohm
> Sent: Thursday, 22 November, 2012 04:07
> (Since you top-posted, I will do so too in this thread)
>
But I won't, because I answer multiple points from both of you.
> The certificate does not include the private key, only the pub
Peter Parker wrote:
Dave,
Thank you for the quick and thorough response. This is good stuff.
Yes, so the files I will be encrypting will be over 100 bytes. I
am aware of the key size requirements - 1028 was only used as a
placeholder for the exampl
(Since you top-posted, I will do so too in this thread)
The certificate does not include the private key, only the public key.
In a real (not test) setup you would use these like this:
1. Use the certificate file alone on any computer to encrypt data using
the"openssl cms" or "openssl pkcs7" co
Dave,
Thank you for the quick and thorough response. This is good stuff.
Yes, so the files I will be encrypting will be over 100 bytes. I am aware
of the key size requirements - 1028 was only used as a placeholder for the
example commands I provided. Does this mean that I will be able to use RSA
o
>From: owner-openssl-us...@openssl.org On Behalf Of Peter Parker
>Sent: Tuesday, 20 November, 2012 20:59
>Subject: This is one for the Pros
Not really. This is pretty basic.
>I've been trying to generate a public/private key pair after
>generating the certificates, but OpenSSL