> From: owner-openssl-us...@openssl.org On Behalf Of Hopkins, Nathan
> Sent: Friday, 02 September, 2011 04:00

> Many thanks! - I now see the S-A-N in the signed cert :)
> 
> Next challenge is I'd like to create a pkcs12 file as below ...
> openssl pkcs12 -export -in server.crt -inkey server.key -name tomcat
> -passout pass:changeit -out serverkeystore.pfx
> 
> However when I view with ...
> openssl pkcs12 -in serverkeystore.pfx -info
> 
> I can't see S-A-N within the .pfx?
> 
'openssl pkcs12' doesn't display details of the cert(s), 
or key(s), within the pkcs12 file. It just inserts or 
extracts them as complete units. You can use 
  openssl pkcs12 -in $file -nokeys -out tempcert 
  # -clcerts would be needed if you put chain 
  # or CA certs in but in this case you didn't
to get the certificate (back) out, and then look at it,
or just compare it to the known-good one you put in.
You can combine these steps with a pipe:
  openssl pkcs12 -in $file -nokeys | openssl x509 -text -noout 

Perhaps better for you, Java can display directly:
  keytool -list -v -keystore $file -storetype pkcs12 



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