gnomint 1.2.1-7 source package in Ubuntu

Changelog

gnomint (1.2.1-7) unstable; urgency=medium


  * QA upload.
  * 10_gnutlsv3: Fix FTBFS with gnutls3 by using gnutls_pkcs12_bag_t instead
    of relying on the *old* (removed) gnutls_pkcs12_bag #define.
  * Rebuild against libgcrypt20-dev.

 -- Andreas Metzler <email address hidden>  Sun, 06 Jul 2014 13:51:37 +0200

Upload details

Uploaded by:
Debian QA Group
Uploaded to:
Sid
Original maintainer:
Debian QA Group
Architectures:
any
Section:
gnome
Urgency:
Medium Urgency

See full publishing history Publishing

Series Pocket Published Component Section

Downloads

File Size SHA-256 Checksum
gnomint_1.2.1-7.dsc 1.8 KiB bb897be79dfbccddc4457c98b124b6699cb54f94fda6a46f29f8ead2a3bf3767
gnomint_1.2.1.orig.tar.gz 686.8 KiB 6186ca6073e912bad5e0b026bc704430098a54392f3741d62929cc6fca3c38b0
gnomint_1.2.1-7.debian.tar.gz 9.8 KiB 7efbf262bfd0eb44968fd0400d8e78aae5eb132cbd91401a64fd09bb9ff4d497

Available diffs

No changes file available.

Binary packages built by this source

gnomint: X.509 Certification Authority management tool for GNOME

 gnoMint is a tool for easily creating and managing certification authorities.
 It provides fancy visualization of all the pieces of information that pertain
 to a CA, such as X.509 certificates, CSRs, and CRLs.
 .
 gnoMint is currently capable of managing a CA that emits certificates that are
 able to authenticate people or machines in VPNs (IPSec or other protocols),
 secure HTTP communications with SSL/TLS, authenticate and cipher HTTP
 communications through Web-client certificates, and sign or crypt email
 messages.

gnomint-dbgsym: debug symbols for package gnomint

 gnoMint is a tool for easily creating and managing certification authorities.
 It provides fancy visualization of all the pieces of information that pertain
 to a CA, such as X.509 certificates, CSRs, and CRLs.
 .
 gnoMint is currently capable of managing a CA that emits certificates that are
 able to authenticate people or machines in VPNs (IPSec or other protocols),
 secure HTTP communications with SSL/TLS, authenticate and cipher HTTP
 communications through Web-client certificates, and sign or crypt email
 messages.