On Fri, 22 Sep 2006, Nick Couchman wrote:
Probably wherever openssl looks for them. Try /etc/pki/tls/certs/,
/etc/ssl/certs/ or /usr/share/ssl/certs/, depending on your distro. You'll
also need to symlink the certificate to its hash, check the openssl docs
if you haven't done this before.
I've just finished trying this and I still get an error when Asterisk
tries to connect. I have a couple other things I need to try (I need to
try to adjust my CA a little bit), but if anyone else has other
suggestions for me, I'd appreciate it.
Try strace? You might be able to see the real place it tries for the
certificates, and what the real errors are
Even better, use wireshark (the new name for ethereal). It'll do a very
nice job (I tend to find better than tcpdump) at showing you the contents
of you ldap queries and responses.
I was using ethereal to interpret the data, but my servers don't have X
on them so it's hard to run Ethereal or Wireshark directly on the
server. So, I use tcpdump to capture to a file, then copy to my
workstation and use Ethereal to open it.
Make sure you use tcpdump with "-s 0" then
Nick
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