Betr.: Re: Betr.: Re: X509 certificates and https
Sorry, I'm not familiar with this environment. Which CA certificate your server certificate is signed with? Give me some important attributes. Perhaps I can send you this certificate as an attachment. Julie McCabe <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 27-05-2004 16:47 Antwoord a.u.b. aan "Tomcat Users List" Aan:"Tomcat Users List" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> cc: Onderwerp: Re: Betr.: Re: X509 certificates and https Hello, I should have included this in my original mail but I am using Mozilla 1.4.1 on RedHat Linuz 9.0 - any ideas? Julie. On Thursday 27 May 2004 15:47, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > If you use Internet Explorer you simple go to the Trusted Certificate > Authorties, select the CA certificate and export it to some format. > You should then be able to import it into your trusted keystore. > > Ron > > > > > > Julie McCabe <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > 27-05-2004 16:21 > Antwoord a.u.b. aan "Tomcat Users List" > > > Aan:"Tomcat Users List" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > cc: > Onderwerp: Re: X509 certificates and https > > > Hi, > > I tried the following command > > keytool -import -alias tomcat -keystore server.ks -trustcacerts -file > server.crt > > with my certificate and key which are in pem format and it returned > keytool error: java.lang.Exception: Input not an X.509 certificate > > > I have the CA certifcate stored in my browser but cant see how I can > export > it? > > Thanks > Julie. > > On Thursday 27 May 2004 15:24, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > > The only thing you have to do is running the java keytool utily with > > following command: > > > > keytool -import -alias tomcat -keystore server.ks -trustcacerts -file > > server.crt > > > > This inserts thet server.crt certificate into the keystore that tomcat > > uses. > > > > Your CA scertificate needs to be in the trusted keystore of your JRE > > under > > > which Tomcat runs. > > If this is not the case put it in there as follows: > > > > keytool -import -keystore %JAVA_HOME%/lib/security/cacerts -file ca.pem > > -alias my_alias > > > > This inserts the root certificate ca.pem into the trusted keystore of > > the > > > JRE being used. > > > > This should work. > > > > Ron Blom > > - > To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] - To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: Betr.: Re: X509 certificates and https
Hello, I should have included this in my original mail but I am using Mozilla 1.4.1 on RedHat Linuz 9.0 - any ideas? Julie. On Thursday 27 May 2004 15:47, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > If you use Internet Explorer you simple go to the Trusted Certificate > Authorties, select the CA certificate and export it to some format. > You should then be able to import it into your trusted keystore. > > Ron > > > > > > Julie McCabe <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > 27-05-2004 16:21 > Antwoord a.u.b. aan "Tomcat Users List" > > > Aan:"Tomcat Users List" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > cc: > Onderwerp: Re: X509 certificates and https > > > Hi, > > I tried the following command > > keytool -import -alias tomcat -keystore server.ks -trustcacerts -file > server.crt > > with my certificate and key which are in pem format and it returned > keytool error: java.lang.Exception: Input not an X.509 certificate > > > I have the CA certifcate stored in my browser but cant see how I can > export > it? > > Thanks > Julie. > > On Thursday 27 May 2004 15:24, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > > The only thing you have to do is running the java keytool utily with > > following command: > > > > keytool -import -alias tomcat -keystore server.ks -trustcacerts -file > > server.crt > > > > This inserts thet server.crt certificate into the keystore that tomcat > > uses. > > > > Your CA scertificate needs to be in the trusted keystore of your JRE > > under > > > which Tomcat runs. > > If this is not the case put it in there as follows: > > > > keytool -import -keystore %JAVA_HOME%/lib/security/cacerts -file ca.pem > > -alias my_alias > > > > This inserts the root certificate ca.pem into the trusted keystore of > > the > > > JRE being used. > > > > This should work. > > > > Ron Blom > > - > To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] - To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Betr.: Re: X509 certificates and https
If you use Internet Explorer you simple go to the Trusted Certificate Authorties, select the CA certificate and export it to some format. You should then be able to import it into your trusted keystore. Ron Julie McCabe <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 27-05-2004 16:21 Antwoord a.u.b. aan "Tomcat Users List" Aan:"Tomcat Users List" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> cc: Onderwerp: Re: X509 certificates and https Hi, I tried the following command keytool -import -alias tomcat -keystore server.ks -trustcacerts -file server.crt with my certificate and key which are in pem format and it returned keytool error: java.lang.Exception: Input not an X.509 certificate I have the CA certifcate stored in my browser but cant see how I can export it? Thanks Julie. On Thursday 27 May 2004 15:24, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > The only thing you have to do is running the java keytool utily with > following command: > > keytool -import -alias tomcat -keystore server.ks -trustcacerts -file > server.crt > > This inserts thet server.crt certificate into the keystore that tomcat > uses. > > Your CA scertificate needs to be in the trusted keystore of your JRE under > which Tomcat runs. > If this is not the case put it in there as follows: > > keytool -import -keystore %JAVA_HOME%/lib/security/cacerts -file ca.pem > -alias my_alias > > This inserts the root certificate ca.pem into the trusted keystore of the > JRE being used. > > This should work. > > Ron Blom - To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]