On Tue, 25 Feb 2014, henry.st...@bblfish.net wrote:
The keygen form element does a great job of specifying how the browser
creates a public/private key pair, stores the private key in it's local
keystore.
When the control's form is submitted, the private key is stored in the
local
So in summary:
(1) most browsers currently understand the mime types
(a) application/x-x509-user-cert
(b) application/x-x509-ca-cert
(c) application/x-x509-email-cert
( I have only verified (a) btw. I am assuming the others also support (b)
and (c) )
as specified here
Hi,
The keygen form element does a great job of specifying how the browser
creates a public/private key pair, stores the private key in it's local
keystore.
When the control's form is submitted, the private key is stored in the local
keystore,
and the public key is packaged and sent to the