I guess the server keys don't expire, I was looking at an article where the
output was this below, hence why I started wondering... I don't think I'll
need it, thank you anyway.
ssh-keygen -L -f user-thomas-cert.pub
user-thomas-cert.pub:
Type: user-a2c776b4bbde@xymon.invalid user certificate
Public key: RSA-CERT-V00 a4:b3:6d:e2:bd:4a:39:01:31:c9:05:43:db:78:f6:c9
Signing CA: RSA a5:e5:20:8e:ea:ea:15:7e:c3:31:60:2d:6b:93:a0:6b
Key ID: "user_thomas"
Valid: from 2011-07-07T15:37:00 to 2012-07-05T15:38:11
Principals:
thomas
thomas2
Gab
On Tue, Jul 17, 2018 at 10:09 AM, Damien Martins <user-c12727b399f0@xymon.invalid>
wrote:
You could design your test using openssl I guess.
Le 17/07/2018 à 16:05, Dito a écrit :
I am looking for something like "sslcert" test where it changes status
based on expiration date.
Is it doable?
Gab
Xymon mailing user-d459c9d661b6@xymon.invalid
--
Cordialement,
Damien Martins