If I have two X509.Certificate objects, how would I validate that one is
correctly subordinate (that is, the signature is correct) to the other?
Cheers,
--B
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Hello folks -
Given a set of certificates, I'd like to verify that the chain is
cryptographically correct, all of the certificates are chronologically
valid, and so forth.
Cheers,
--B
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Hi Benn,
I'm still new to the cryptography community but I am currently working on
adding a certificate validation feature that will do just this. I'm hoping
to get the code up for it soon. Right now, I believe you would need to
manually check the signer names, the signatures, and validity dates
y
Ouch, that's a bummer of a response.
What's the alternative for me before this code gets sorted? Convert the
x509 and public_key to PEM and cross-load them into, I dunno, pyOpenSSL or
m2crypto or something else? (suggestions welcome).
Cheers,
--B
On Thu, Oct 29, 2015 at 1:22 PM, Peter Hamilton
2015-10-30 1:40 GMT+03:00 Benn Bollay:
> Ouch, that's a bummer of a response.
>
> What's the alternative for me before this code gets sorted? Convert the
> x509 and public_key to PEM and cross-load them into, I dunno, pyOpenSSL or
> m2crypto or something else? (suggestions welcome).
>
I used pyO