Hi :) I think post it as a bug-report. I'm sure you are probably experienced at this but jic, and mostly for other people to take note of ... When you post a bug-report it's a lot like writing an email. The subject line needs to be a very short indication of what the problem is. People have a tendency to write something like "problem with LibreOffice" but since all bug-reports are problems and the whole bug-reporting system is dedicated to just LibreOffice such a line doesn't help. For this bug-report something like "certificates, attaching self-signed or personal ones in LO 5.0.2 in Windows", something nice and succinct. Being succinct is NOT something i'm good at!! So, you'll probably have a better idea.
Note that you can always add extra 'emails', including attachments, to it later. So you can post with fairly little information if you need to dig around to find all the bits&bobs a good bug-report would need. It's better if you can get it all together fairly quickly but doesn't all HAVE to be in the first post = it's just better if you can. There are several drop-down menus to set "urgency" and stuff. Mostly QA and the devs handle that but one of them has "feature request" as one of the options. It might be worth posting this as a feature request. It sounds like LibreOffice can use either a "self-signed" one or a "personal" one. I read those instructions as just advice that it's better to use "a personal certificate". It sounds like whichever you use is used in the same way but that if you can use a "personal" one it is likely to be even more trusted than a self-signed one. I think just go for a self-signed one for now unless you already have a "personal" one = or unless you are doing this as part of the verification process or something like that. There is online help in the wiki and an Faq in there. If you can read something other than English then the online help or the help built into LibreOffice might give slightly different instructions that help you figure out how to attach the certificates. If you only read English it still might but the translated versions of all other documentation tends to be better in non-English. The English version is designed to be easier to translate. In English the best help is the published guides that you've already read. Regards from Tom :) On 15 October 2015 at 11:07, Евгений <[email protected]> wrote: > Hello. > > "Writer 4.2 Guide" from second link. > > ===== > Certificate Path > > Note > This option appears only on Linux and Mac systems. On Windows, LibreOffice > uses > the default Windows location for storing and retrieving certificates. > > Users can digitally sign documents using LibreOffice. A digital signature > requires a personal > signing certificate. Most operating systems can generate a self-signed > certificate. However, a > personal certificate issued by an outside agency (after verifying an > individual's identity) has a > higher degree of trust associated with it than does a self-signed > certificate. LibreOffice does not > provide a secure method of storing these certificates, but it can access > certificates that have > been saved using other programs. Click Certificate and select which > certificate store to use. > ===== > > Is it mean, that in LO i can use only self-signed certificates to sign > documents? > > My problem is that LO do not add my certificate, but can see it in > certificate store (i try it on windows). > Is it bug and i should report it or this is normal behavior? > > > 12.10.2015, 22:56, "Tom Davies" <[email protected]>: > > Hi :) > > Do the "Published Guides" help at all? They are both here; > > https://wiki.documentfoundation.org/Documentation/Publications > > and here; > > http://www.libreoffice.org/get-help/documentation/ > > and a few other places but those two links have them for free. > > > > The Published Guides are usually the best documentation in English. There > > is the Faq and the 'in-built' help but the Published Guides tend to be a > > LOT better. The other help tends to be MUCH easier to translate, and > > people work hard at that, so the translations tend to be excellent but > for > > English please try the Published Guides. Having said that i'm not sure if > > they cover this issue! Please let us know. > > Regards from > > Tom :) xxxx > > > > On 12 October 2015 at 14:49, Philip Jackson <[email protected]> > > wrote: > > > >> Hi, I have been using signatures occasionally over the past couple of > years > >> without any problem. I initially used Firefox to load my signature > >> together > >> with the root. LO swriter then had no problem finding the certificate > and > >> signing with it. > >> > >> Now, my old certificate has expired and I have the replacement > certificate > >> installed in FireFox.. > >> > >> Your email prompted me to try and sign a document with my new > >> certificate. LO > >> cannot see my new certificate (only the old expired one). > >> > >> As usual (see recent threads) the LO Help doesn't actually help very > >> much. It > >> talks about an ADD button in the Digital Signing dialog but I don't > get an > >> ADD > >> button. I can sign with the old certificate even though it is expired > and > >> then > >> the document shows that the signature is broken. > >> > >> I used FireFox to remove my expired certificate and even after > rebooting > >> LO only > >> sees the expired one and not the new one. Still no ADD button so does > LO > >> limit > >> users to a single certificate ? Where does LO store the certificates ? > >> > >> I found the answer to this by looking in the LO writer > >> Tools/Options/LibreOffice/Security tab > >> > >> There the bottom item was Certificate Path and it gave me two choices : > >> FireFox > >> profile or Thunderbird profile > >> > >> My LO was on Thunderbird's profile and I had forgotten to update that > one > >> with > >> my new certificate details. So I switched to FireFox which was up to > date. > >> > >> After re-starting LO, my document could be signed by the new > certificate. > >> > >> I updated my Thunderbird profile with the new certificate and set LO to > >> Thunderbird. After restarting LO, I tried to resign the document. But > >> from the > >> Thunderbird profile, LO only sees the outdated certificate. > >> > >> So I conclude several points : > >> > >> 1. LO Writer can only see 1 certificate in either FireFox or > Thunderbird > >> profiles and that is the oldest of however many certs are present. > >> > >> 2. If the oldest is out of date - tough > >> > >> 3. LO Help button on the digital signing dialog box lands the user on a > >> webpage > >> which correctly announces that it has no information. > >> > >> 4. searching on the LO Help website finds some help which talks of > using > >> the > >> ADD button to add a certificate. But at least with LO 4.2.8.2 (Ubuntu > >> 1404 LTS > >> with their latest updates), I cannot find any such button. > >> > >> 5. My solution was to delete the expired certificate from FireFox > profile. > >> And > >> LO correctly used the new one which had remained invisible up to that > >> point. > >> > >> I am not sure that time expired certs should be deleted. They are > probably > >> needed to verify old signatures or to decrypt old files. > >> > >> Philip > >> > >> On 12/10/15 04:14, Евгений wrote: > >> > No one here used signatures? > >> > No one can help or give some advices to resolve problem? > >> > > >> > > >> > 07.10.2015, 10:00, "Евгений" <[email protected]>: > >> >> Hello. > >> >> > >> >> Can someone help me with digital signatures? > >> >> > >> >> I tried LO 5.0.2, 4.4.5.2 and even AOO 4.1.1 on windows server 2008 > r2. > >> >> > >> >> I have imported root CA certificate. I have copied private and > public > >> keys to registry from token. > >> >> My certificate is valid. > >> >> > >> >> When i use "File - Digital signatures" and try to add one to > document - > >> nothing happens. > >> >> I can see my certificate details from LO dialog, but when i select > it > >> and press OK - none added to document. > >> >> > >> >> Document - ODT file. > >> >> > >> >> No errors or other messages appeared. > >> >> > >> >> -- > >> >> To unsubscribe e-mail to: [email protected] > >> >> Problems? > >> http://www.libreoffice.org/get-help/mailing-lists/how-to-unsubscribe/ > >> >> Posting guidelines + more: > >> http://wiki.documentfoundation.org/Netiquette > >> >> List archive: http://listarchives.libreoffice.org/global/users/ > >> >> All messages sent to this list will be publicly archived and cannot > be > >> deleted > >> > > >> > >> -- > >> To unsubscribe e-mail to: [email protected] > >> Problems? > >> http://www.libreoffice.org/get-help/mailing-lists/how-to-unsubscribe/ > >> Posting guidelines + more: > http://wiki.documentfoundation.org/Netiquette > >> List archive: http://listarchives.libreoffice.org/global/users/ > >> All messages sent to this list will be publicly archived and cannot be > >> deleted > > > > -- > > To unsubscribe e-mail to: [email protected] > > Problems? > http://www.libreoffice.org/get-help/mailing-lists/how-to-unsubscribe/ > > Posting guidelines + more: http://wiki.documentfoundation.org/Netiquette > > List archive: http://listarchives.libreoffice.org/global/users/ > > All messages sent to this list will be publicly archived and cannot be > deleted > -- To unsubscribe e-mail to: [email protected] Problems? http://www.libreoffice.org/get-help/mailing-lists/how-to-unsubscribe/ Posting guidelines + more: http://wiki.documentfoundation.org/Netiquette List archive: http://listarchives.libreoffice.org/global/users/ All messages sent to this list will be publicly archived and cannot be deleted
