https://bz.apache.org/ooo/show_bug.cgi?id=126891
--- Comment #33 from orcmid <[email protected]> --- (In reply to Don Lewis from comment #31) [ ... ] > The text I quoted is from the built-in help. The search string that took me > to that page is "signing documents with digital signatures", and the text is > under the "Managing your Certificates" heading. Ah, so. The built-in help on Windows is different. It says, under "Managing Your Certificates", If you are using Microsoft Windows, you can manage your certificates from the Control Panel applet "Internet Options" on the "Contents" tab page. Import your new root certificate into the Trusted Root Certification Authorities list. In reality, the certificate generation process between the CA and a Windows PC computer happens with the browser (unless you use Symantec which has now screwed this up royally.) The above procedure only really applies if you do a self-issued cert. In any case, I suspect the certificate identifies what it is usable for by its Class and the only thing you should need to do on a machine where Firefox handles this instead is manage to have the certificate installed in the Firefox secure store, however that works. When you create the other issue on using expired certificates I will test whether that happens when the Windows native private-key store is used. -- You are receiving this mail because: You are the assignee for the issue.
