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Matthias Andree
a4027193e3
Update extraction script to:
- Only look at CKA_TRUST_SERVER_AUTH, _EMAIL_PROTECTION, and _CODE_SIGNING attributes. - Omit certificates that do not have any explicit trust value in these three attributes; at least one of the purposes must mark the certificate a trusted delegator. - Validate that the trust is one of three known trust values, to become aware of syntax changes in certdata.txt. If it is an unknown token, abort with an error stating that the script must be updated. - Check that we have at least 25 certificates in the output or abort. This removes these two certificates that have "unknown" (CKT_NSS_MUST_VERIFY_TRUST) in all three tokens, making them unfit as trust anchors: 1 C=DE, O=TC TrustCenter GmbH, OU=TC TrustCenter Universal CA, CN=TC TrustCenter Universal CA III 2 C=US, ST=UT, L=Salt Lake City, O=The USERTRUST Network, OU=http://www.usertrust.com, CN=UTN-USERFirst-Network Applications 164 trusted certificates remain.
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This is the FreeBSD Ports Collection. For an easy to use WEB-based interface to it, please see: http://www.FreeBSD.org/ports For general information on the Ports Collection, please see the FreeBSD Handbook ports section which is available from: http://www.FreeBSD.org/doc/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/handbook/ports.html for the latest official version or: The ports(7) manual page (man ports). These will explain how to use ports and packages. If you would like to search for a port, you can do so easily by saying (in /usr/ports): make search name="<name>" or: make search key="<keyword>" which will generate a list of all ports matching <name> or <keyword>. make search also supports wildcards, such as: make search name="gtk*" For information about contributing to FreeBSD ports, please see the Porter's Handbook, available at: http://www.FreeBSD.org/doc/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/porters-handbook/ NOTE: This tree will GROW significantly in size during normal usage! The distribution tar files can and do accumulate in /usr/ports/distfiles, and the individual ports will also use up lots of space in their work subdirectories unless you remember to "make clean" after you're done building a given port. /usr/ports/distfiles can also be periodically cleaned without ill-effect.
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