Is there a similar tool for the windows environment ?
It could be handy...
Best regards,
_
Carlos Serro [EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://www.carlos-serrao.com
DCTI - IS/IT Department
of graphical SSL certificate manager
Solaris 2.7. Intel ?? or Sparc. I was trying on Intel Solaris had a
couple
of problems compiling Entity.
If you are also trying on Intel, let me know I will give u all the
details.
BTW I am facing some problem
uisng ssl-manager on Intel Solaris Stephen
Stephen Balukoff wrote:
Howdy!
I've recently written and released a gtk/entity based GUI for SSL
certificate generation and management. The goals of this software are to
provide a simplified approach to the somewhat complicated matter of SSL
certificates. It uses the openssl executable
Yes I did. Entity 0.7.1
I used my PC to download used winzip to unzip the file. I got the same
errors. Then ftped the .gz file to my
unix box used gunzip it uncompressed fine.
BTW once u start to compile entity it may complain you don't have glib
gtk. If u dont have go ahead and
download glib
I am trying to install it on Solaris 2.7
Patrick
- Original Message -
From: Surya N Viriyala [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Friday, March 16, 2001 1:01 PM
Subject: Re: ANNOUNCE: Release of graphical SSL certificate manager
Yes I did. Entity 0.7.1
I used my PC
Solaris 2.7 on Sparc. Thanks for the info!
- Original Message -
From: Surya N Viriyala [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Friday, March 16, 2001 1:30 PM
Subject: Re: ANNOUNCE: Release of graphical SSL certificate manager
Solaris 2.7. Intel ?? or Sparc. I was trying
violated
I got same error for 0.7.1 tar file as well.
Thanks
- Original Message -
From: Stephen Balukoff [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Wednesday, March 14, 2001 10:42 AM
Subject: ANNOUNCE: Release of graphical SSL certificate manager
Howdy!
I've recently
Howdy!
I've recently written and released a gtk/entity based GUI for SSL
certificate generation and management. The goals of this software are to
provide a simplified approach to the somewhat complicated matter of SSL
certificates. It uses the openssl executable in a 'shell-script on
steriods'