i'm hoping this is an easy one, even though i'm going thru the docs as we speak. on a functioning debian system, for the last many weeks, the clients who have fired up their thunderbird clients have been told:
"mail.XXX.com is a site that uses a security certificate to encrypt data during transmission, but its certificate expired on 7/7/2009 2:06PM" mail is still being delivered, though, but it would be nice to make that diagnostic go away. i have a screen cap of the dialog box, which makes it clear it's related to dovecot. is there a simple recipe for renewing that cert (something i've never had occasion to do)? just pointing me at the appropriate web page would be fine. and is that enough info to know how to solve the problem? an expert mail admin i'm not. rday p.s. i'm assuming the certs are kept under /etc/ssl/certs. is there a cert examination command to display things like expiration dates, that would let me poke at some of those .pem files and go, "aha, that's the one with that expiration date." -- ======================================================================== Robert P. J. Day Waterloo, Ontario, CANADA Linux Consulting, Training and Annoying Kernel Pedantry. Web page: http://crashcourse.ca Twitter: http://twitter.com/rpjday ======================================================================== -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-user-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org