Hi,
On 16/03/2011 09:33, Rickard Bellgrim wrote:
>>> ods-enforcerd -1
>>>
>>> to have the signconf file created and the keys set for the zone.
>>
>> Or you can send a SIGHUP to the ods-enforcerd process that is running to
>> wake
>> it up.
>
> or
>
> ods-ksmutil notify
Is there a way to notif
On 28/02/2011 14:34, Rickard Bellgrim wrote:
>
> It works for me.
>
> I installed an Ubuntu 10.10 32-bit with OpenDNSSEC from Launchpad
> (https://launchpad.net/~pkg-opendnssec/+archive/ppa/). Start signing
> using the configuration and keys from you.
>
> I'm also running out of ideas.
>
> //
Hi all,
I'm having a hard time signing my first zone with opendnssec. The signer
crashes on the first attempt to sign the zone.
I started several weeks ago with opendnssec 1.1, then compiled/installed
version 1.2.0, then purged all, and checked there were no binaries/conf
left, and instal
On 17/02/2011 11:28, Patrik Wallström wrote:
> Hi all!
>
> I have been doing some tests with running OpenDNSSEC with 5
> zones. My experiences from this experiment has now been published
> on the OpenDNSSEC web site:
>
> http://www.opendnssec.org/2011/02/17/running-opendnssec-with-5-zones/
On 05/11/2010 12:53, Rickard Bellgrim wrote:
> Yes, in order to use SoftHSM, you need to have read/write privileges to
> the directory/file where it stores the token. You can find the
> location of directory/file in /etc/softhsm.conf
>
> Then you need to run both the Enforcer and the Signer with
Hello,
I am getting started with opendnssec (version 1.1.0) with the default setup.
I initialized SoftHSM, configured the token label and PIN in conf.xml,
copied a test zone file in /var/lib/opendnssec/unsigned/, added the zone
with "ods-ksmutil zone -z demo-serveur.fr -p default", started