On 2/26/08, Robert Garcia <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > No, if you are reffering to many bank specs, and others that require > you specify a certificate, it is not possible with witango. I have > done this in the past, and have used all three of the following methods.
This is what I was expecting. Thanks for confirming this for me, Robert. > 1. Java bean written for witango > 2. External action written in .net, VB, or realbasic, or whatever > 3. Do this in php, or some language where you can do it. In php, > create a interface that can be called with @url and still use @URL but > to the php intermediate. > > All 3 work, 3 is believe it or not is the most robust. 1 works but > becareful if you have to pass large amounts of text through it, any > more than a page will start to choke witango buggy java bean > interface. 2 works, but if this is going to be called hundreds of > times during the day, several of us have reported that calling > external actions can cause witango to be more unstable. I too have seen problems when hitting too many External Actions in Witango. > 3 seems less reliable, but if you php (or whatever) service is > reliable, and especially if on the same subnet, 3 is robust. > > -- > > > Robert Garcia > President - BigHead Technology > VP Application Development - eventpix.com > 13653 West Park Dr > Magalia, Ca 95954 > ph: 530.645.4040 x222 fax: 530.645.4040 > [EMAIL PROTECTED] - [EMAIL PROTECTED] > http://bighead.net/ - http://eventpix.com/ > > > On Feb 26, 2008, at 9:12 AM, John McGowan wrote: > > > > Has anybody out there been able to use the @url tag to make an https > > connection to a server that requires a client certificate for > > authentication? > > > > I was thinking that I would be able to install my client certificate > > by some openssl method, but I can't figure it out, and other programs > > that also use open SSL (like wget for example) have their own command > > line parameters for specifying a .pem file containing the certificate. > > > > I'm starting to think that openssl doesn't have a key store like > > browsers do, and that what we really need here is for @URL to be > > capable of passing the text of a PEM file as another attribute. > > > > -- > > /John > > ________________________________________________________________________ > > TO UNSUBSCRIBE: Go to http://www.witango.com/developer/maillist.taf > > > ________________________________________________________________________ > TO UNSUBSCRIBE: Go to http://www.witango.com/developer/maillist.taf > > -- /John ________________________________________________________________________ TO UNSUBSCRIBE: Go to http://www.witango.com/developer/maillist.taf
