[EMAIL PROTECTED] Certificates and keys

2006-06-21 Thread Savage, Robert CTR USTRANSCOM J6
Im reconstructing a web site and having certificate trouble. http://localhost/ displays the test file at DocumentRoot F:\www\Apache2\htdocs, but https://locahost/ gives me the old The page cannot be displayed error. Is there a way to show that a file server.key is the private key for a

Re: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Certificates and keys

2006-06-21 Thread Andy Buckley
Savage, Robert CTR USTRANSCOM J6 wrote: I'm reconstructing a web site and having certificate trouble. http://localhost/ displays the test file at DocumentRoot F:\www\Apache2\htdocs, but https://locahost/ gives me the old The page cannot be displayed error. Is there a way to show that a file

RE: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Certificates and keys

2006-06-21 Thread Savage, Robert CTR USTRANSCOM J6
-Original Message- From: Andy Buckley [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Wednesday, June 21, 2006 13:48 To: users@httpd.apache.org Subject: Re: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Certificates and keys Savage, Robert CTR USTRANSCOM J6 wrote: I'm reconstructing a web site and having certificate trouble. http

Re: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Certificates and keys

2006-06-21 Thread Andy Buckley
Savage, Robert CTR USTRANSCOM J6 wrote: Thanks very much for the pointer. Now I must ask one last (and very ignorant) question: Do the following results really say that server.key doesn't go with server.cert? $ openssl x509 -noout -text -in server.cert | openssl md5