Creating a quickly expiring signature

2011-07-28 Thread Dan McGee
I wanted to test behavior of an application with an expired signature, but using `--ask-sig-expire` don't seem to be granular enough. The minimum I can specify is either 1 day, or an absolute date (e.g. 2011-07-29), which is still 8+ hours away for me right now. Am I missing something? Decimal

Re: Creating a quickly expiring signature

2011-07-28 Thread David Shaw
On Jul 28, 2011, at 4:49 PM, Dan McGee wrote: I wanted to test behavior of an application with an expired signature, but using `--ask-sig-expire` don't seem to be granular enough. The minimum I can specify is either 1 day, or an absolute date (e.g. 2011-07-29), which is still 8+ hours away

Re: Creating a quickly expiring signature

2011-07-28 Thread Robert J. Hansen
On 7/28/11 4:49 PM, Dan McGee wrote: I wanted to test behavior of an application with an expired signature, but using `--ask-sig-expire` don't seem to be granular enough. Set your system clock back a year, create a sig that expires in a year, reset your system to the normal time. The simplest

Re: Creating a quickly expiring signature

2011-07-28 Thread Dan McGee
On Thu, Jul 28, 2011 at 5:04 PM, David Shaw ds...@jabberwocky.com wrote: On Jul 28, 2011, at 4:49 PM, Dan McGee wrote: I wanted to test behavior of an application with an expired signature, but using `--ask-sig-expire` don't seem to be granular enough. The minimum I can specify is either 1