Sweet Christian, this is wonderful news. Thanks for your efforts here. Chris
On Sat, 2005-01-15 at 17:00 +0100, Christian Stimming wrote: > Hi all, > > a few days ago I described an available testserver account, so that others > can > try out the HBCI features even without an actual HBCI bank. > > The provider of this testserver now notified me that its server address has > changed. So if you tried the setup with the IP address from 2005-01-11, then > you will have to try again with a new address of > "www.hora-obscura.de/pintan/PinTanServlet". Since this might be interesting > for other hackers in the future as well, I just added this into src/ > import-export/hbci/HACKING-HBCITEST.txt. The file is intended solely to > developers, not at all to end users, so it should never be distributed with > any tarball. Below is a copy of this text. > > Christian > > > Hi all developers, > > as you know, Gnucash includes support for the German online banking > protocol HBCI, and I usually emphasize that anyone outside Germany will > be unable to use all these cool features. But it recently came to my > mind that there is a test server, simulating a HBCI bank, which is run > by a friend of us (Stefan Palme), and he is able to give the Gnucash > developers something like a test account for, well, testing purposes. > > One authentification method of the HBCI protocol requires only a PIN for > login, and a TAN (transaction number) for each issued online order. We > can use this as a shared test account, because anyone who knows the PIN > (and some TANs) can use it. So I invite all you fellow developers to > install the HBCI features of gnucash, start the HBCI setup druid, setup > a Pin/Tan-based HBCI account, and just try out all the possible > features. Naturally, this test account won't move any real money around ) > > (The Pin/Tan authentification method was added in 1.8.10 when changing > the HBCI library to Aqbanking. This method is rather insecure, but since > it is very simple to use there is quite some demand for it. So we > eventually implemented it in gnucash. I wouldn't recommend this for real > online banking if there is any of the other HBCI authentification > methods like chip cards or RSA keys available.) > > Here's what you need to enter in the HBCI setup druid: > * "Use Pin/Tan mode" > * Bank Code: 80007777 > Server: www.hora-obscura.de/pintan/PinTanServlet > (the URL changed on 2005-01-15) > > User-Name: (something arbitrary; only for yourself) > User-Id: gnucash > Customer-Id: gnucash [or as a second customer: gnucash2] > * Then press next all the time > * For this user the PIN is: 12345 > * The setup druid should automatically recognize that this account > offers access to the account numbers "2501111538" and "2501111539" > * That finishes the setup. > > If you want to send money between these two account numbers back and > forth, you can do so by using any of the following TANs: > 11111111 > 22222222 > ... > 99999999 > > Enjoy! Don't hesitate to notify me if anything is broke. > > Christian [EMAIL PROTECTED] > > > There's an administrator web frontend reachable under > https://www.hora-obscura.de/hbci wheren the used TANs can be > resetted. The password for this can be asked from Christian Stimming. > > _______________________________________________ > gnucash-devel mailing list > [email protected] > https://lists.gnucash.org/mailman/listinfo/gnucash-devel > -- RedHat Certified Engineer #807302549405490. Checkpoint Certified Security Expert 2000 & NG -------------------------------------------- |^| | | |^| | |^| | | Life out here is raw | | |^| | But we will never stop | |_|_| | We will never quit | / __> | cause we are Metallica |/ / | \ / | | -------------------------------------------- _______________________________________________ gnucash-devel mailing list [email protected] https://lists.gnucash.org/mailman/listinfo/gnucash-devel
