Thx for closing the loop :)

Bye,
Norman


2011/2/2 agks mehx <[email protected]>:
> Solved -- the problem was that I had created a fresh keystore containing
> only the certificates (and no key), instead of adding the certificates to
> the original keystore containing the key from which I generated the
> certificate signing request.  I tracked down the original keystore file
> containing the key from which I generated the certificate signing request,
> and then added the certificates to that file.  That made it work like a
> charm.
>
> On Tue, Feb 1, 2011 at 1:01 PM, agks mehx <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>> Before installing an SSL certificate I could successfully send test emails
>> using Thunderbird (even though Thunderbird would warn me about there being
>> no certificate).
>>
>> After installing an SSL certificate (from Go Daddy), I started getting
>> ssl_error_no_cypher_overlap.  Any suggestions?
>>
>> I am running on Amazon EC2 and Java was installed from yum repositories or
>> pre-installed rather than the full JDK coming from Sun/Oracle.  May be the
>> installed JDK does not have the JSSE components?  But this was working fine
>> before installing the certificates so that is not consistent with this
>> hypothesis.
>>
>> Here is how I imported the certificates.
>>
>> keytool -import -alias root -keystore james.keystore -trustcacerts -file
>> gd-class2-root.crt
>> keytool -import -alias cross -keystore james.keystore -trustcacerts -file
>> gd_cross_intermediate.crt
>> keytool -import -alias intermed -keystore james.keystore -trustcacerts
>> -file gd_intermediate.crt
>> keytool -import -alias james -keystore james.keystore -trustcacerts -file
>> smtp.myhostname.com.crt
>>
>>
>

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