Ok sorry to be terribly anal, but you had it coming:
1. Your post does not have anything to do with Linux AT ALL.
(without even posting an obligatory [OT])
2. You used a subject from another topic for your post.
People subscribe to this mailing list TO TALK ABOUT LINUX. Hopefully, If
you are more concerned over what kind of mail you feed to hundreds of
mailboxes rather than "masayang yung pag kalas mo", you will not do this
again.
There are other mailing lists (ph-hardware) newsgroups and discussion
media for this, look it up in google, or altavista. Get the hint, please.
On Mon, 19 Mar 2001, Renato Joves wrote:
> greetings peeps.. does anyone here knows if a sparcstation 20 has an IDE
> port? i cant locate one on the sparc machine. I see a pcb board on top of a
> board but I cant unscrew it. If anyone here knows, please tell me if there
> is an IDE port on this machine para nde masayang ang pagkalas ko if ever..
> thanks!
>
>
> regards,
> jeibi
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Horatio B. Bogbindero [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
> Sent: Tuesday, March 20, 2001 11:15 AM
> To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Subject: Re: [plug] non-interactive creation of a certificate request
>
>
> >
> > > He he he you're making an RPM of apache right? \8)
> > >
> > > What i did was i ran through the interactive part manually, grabbed the
> > > generated certificates, and placed them into a tarball. And then
> instead
> > > of doing a 'make certificate' i simply extracted the tarball. It works
> > > for simple SSL sites, and the browser will complain more are most likely
> > > the certificate authority domain name will not match the actual hostname
> > > of the server you install the RPM in.
> > >
> > > On Tue, 20 Mar 2001, Horatio B. Bogbindero wrote:
> > > > good morning people! i was just wonder if anybody here would know
> about
> > > > an non-interactive way of generating a certification request (for SSL
> > > > certificates)?
> > > >
> > > > thanks.
> >
> > You can actually change all the defaults in your openssl.cnf and then when
>
> > generating via "openssl req" you can do an input redirection from a file
> full
> > of carriage returns. Or if you don't feel like changing the conf file
> then
> > just include the info on the input redirection file and do the same step.
> >
> > 'openssl req -new -key my.key -out my.csr < file_containing_details'
> >
> maybe i would go for the carriage returns...or... i will have to learn
> expect.
>
> --------------------------------------
> William Emmanuel S. Yu
> Ateneo Cervini-Eliazo Networks (ACENT)
> email : [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> web : http://cersa.admu.edu.ph/
> phone : 63(2)4266001-5925/5904
>
> Happiness is the greatest good.
>
>
> _
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>
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>
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