crt certificate not appearing in menu for selection
I'm trying to set up the VPN for my university on my laptop. I have downloaded to certificate file and put it in ~/misc/cacert.crt
. When I try to set up the VPN, I click on the CA Certificate option and navigate to ~/misc/
in the selection menu. The certificate does not appear there. The folder appears empty. I tried adding a new version of the file that is named differently, also doesn't appear in the menu. I can double click on the file in nautilus and it brings up a little box with the details of the certificate, so there's nothing wrong with the file.
Any idea what's causing this bizarre problem?
I've found something out. If I do file cacert.crt
I get data
whereas if I do file
on a .crt
certificate that does show up (which I found in /etc/ssl/certs/
) then I get PEM certificate
. So presumably having .crt
is not enough and the VPN setup wants file
to return a valid certificate type? How do I change this?
grep 'crt' /etc/mime.types
gives me application/x-x509-ca-cert
which, as I understand it, should mean that *.crt
files are recognised as certificates. So why is my cacert.crt
only appearing as data
?
vpn openvpn certificates
add a comment |
I'm trying to set up the VPN for my university on my laptop. I have downloaded to certificate file and put it in ~/misc/cacert.crt
. When I try to set up the VPN, I click on the CA Certificate option and navigate to ~/misc/
in the selection menu. The certificate does not appear there. The folder appears empty. I tried adding a new version of the file that is named differently, also doesn't appear in the menu. I can double click on the file in nautilus and it brings up a little box with the details of the certificate, so there's nothing wrong with the file.
Any idea what's causing this bizarre problem?
I've found something out. If I do file cacert.crt
I get data
whereas if I do file
on a .crt
certificate that does show up (which I found in /etc/ssl/certs/
) then I get PEM certificate
. So presumably having .crt
is not enough and the VPN setup wants file
to return a valid certificate type? How do I change this?
grep 'crt' /etc/mime.types
gives me application/x-x509-ca-cert
which, as I understand it, should mean that *.crt
files are recognised as certificates. So why is my cacert.crt
only appearing as data
?
vpn openvpn certificates
1
My answer here might be helpful.
– user76204
Jan 15 '13 at 18:03
That doesn't seem to have helped. I've put copies of the file in a number of different directories and runupdate-ca-certificates
but with no luck. The file just doesn't show up in the selection menu.
– Seamus
Jan 16 '13 at 13:00
add a comment |
I'm trying to set up the VPN for my university on my laptop. I have downloaded to certificate file and put it in ~/misc/cacert.crt
. When I try to set up the VPN, I click on the CA Certificate option and navigate to ~/misc/
in the selection menu. The certificate does not appear there. The folder appears empty. I tried adding a new version of the file that is named differently, also doesn't appear in the menu. I can double click on the file in nautilus and it brings up a little box with the details of the certificate, so there's nothing wrong with the file.
Any idea what's causing this bizarre problem?
I've found something out. If I do file cacert.crt
I get data
whereas if I do file
on a .crt
certificate that does show up (which I found in /etc/ssl/certs/
) then I get PEM certificate
. So presumably having .crt
is not enough and the VPN setup wants file
to return a valid certificate type? How do I change this?
grep 'crt' /etc/mime.types
gives me application/x-x509-ca-cert
which, as I understand it, should mean that *.crt
files are recognised as certificates. So why is my cacert.crt
only appearing as data
?
vpn openvpn certificates
I'm trying to set up the VPN for my university on my laptop. I have downloaded to certificate file and put it in ~/misc/cacert.crt
. When I try to set up the VPN, I click on the CA Certificate option and navigate to ~/misc/
in the selection menu. The certificate does not appear there. The folder appears empty. I tried adding a new version of the file that is named differently, also doesn't appear in the menu. I can double click on the file in nautilus and it brings up a little box with the details of the certificate, so there's nothing wrong with the file.
Any idea what's causing this bizarre problem?
I've found something out. If I do file cacert.crt
I get data
whereas if I do file
on a .crt
certificate that does show up (which I found in /etc/ssl/certs/
) then I get PEM certificate
. So presumably having .crt
is not enough and the VPN setup wants file
to return a valid certificate type? How do I change this?
grep 'crt' /etc/mime.types
gives me application/x-x509-ca-cert
which, as I understand it, should mean that *.crt
files are recognised as certificates. So why is my cacert.crt
only appearing as data
?
vpn openvpn certificates
vpn openvpn certificates
edited Jan 16 '13 at 13:25
asked Jan 15 '13 at 12:42
Seamus
461427
461427
1
My answer here might be helpful.
– user76204
Jan 15 '13 at 18:03
That doesn't seem to have helped. I've put copies of the file in a number of different directories and runupdate-ca-certificates
but with no luck. The file just doesn't show up in the selection menu.
– Seamus
Jan 16 '13 at 13:00
add a comment |
1
My answer here might be helpful.
– user76204
Jan 15 '13 at 18:03
That doesn't seem to have helped. I've put copies of the file in a number of different directories and runupdate-ca-certificates
but with no luck. The file just doesn't show up in the selection menu.
– Seamus
Jan 16 '13 at 13:00
1
1
My answer here might be helpful.
– user76204
Jan 15 '13 at 18:03
My answer here might be helpful.
– user76204
Jan 15 '13 at 18:03
That doesn't seem to have helped. I've put copies of the file in a number of different directories and run
update-ca-certificates
but with no luck. The file just doesn't show up in the selection menu.– Seamus
Jan 16 '13 at 13:00
That doesn't seem to have helped. I've put copies of the file in a number of different directories and run
update-ca-certificates
but with no luck. The file just doesn't show up in the selection menu.– Seamus
Jan 16 '13 at 13:00
add a comment |
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
It may be too late to help you, but I'm posting this here for future reference. I had the same problem. I ended up just typing the file name in the address at the top and it worked. Took me an hour to figure it out though.
add a comment |
I did not have a location field, but was able to work around this by:
- Click the CA cert box, right click the folder and click "open file with file manager"
- Cancel out of that but keep your file manager open
- Drag and drop the pem file to the CA cert box in the network config dialogue.
This was with bionic before official bionic release.
add a comment |
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2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
active
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votes
active
oldest
votes
It may be too late to help you, but I'm posting this here for future reference. I had the same problem. I ended up just typing the file name in the address at the top and it worked. Took me an hour to figure it out though.
add a comment |
It may be too late to help you, but I'm posting this here for future reference. I had the same problem. I ended up just typing the file name in the address at the top and it worked. Took me an hour to figure it out though.
add a comment |
It may be too late to help you, but I'm posting this here for future reference. I had the same problem. I ended up just typing the file name in the address at the top and it worked. Took me an hour to figure it out though.
It may be too late to help you, but I'm posting this here for future reference. I had the same problem. I ended up just typing the file name in the address at the top and it worked. Took me an hour to figure it out though.
answered Mar 12 '14 at 3:22
mmaluff
548510
548510
add a comment |
add a comment |
I did not have a location field, but was able to work around this by:
- Click the CA cert box, right click the folder and click "open file with file manager"
- Cancel out of that but keep your file manager open
- Drag and drop the pem file to the CA cert box in the network config dialogue.
This was with bionic before official bionic release.
add a comment |
I did not have a location field, but was able to work around this by:
- Click the CA cert box, right click the folder and click "open file with file manager"
- Cancel out of that but keep your file manager open
- Drag and drop the pem file to the CA cert box in the network config dialogue.
This was with bionic before official bionic release.
add a comment |
I did not have a location field, but was able to work around this by:
- Click the CA cert box, right click the folder and click "open file with file manager"
- Cancel out of that but keep your file manager open
- Drag and drop the pem file to the CA cert box in the network config dialogue.
This was with bionic before official bionic release.
I did not have a location field, but was able to work around this by:
- Click the CA cert box, right click the folder and click "open file with file manager"
- Cancel out of that but keep your file manager open
- Drag and drop the pem file to the CA cert box in the network config dialogue.
This was with bionic before official bionic release.
answered Apr 18 at 13:32
Kyle Brandt
3571618
3571618
add a comment |
add a comment |
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1
My answer here might be helpful.
– user76204
Jan 15 '13 at 18:03
That doesn't seem to have helped. I've put copies of the file in a number of different directories and run
update-ca-certificates
but with no luck. The file just doesn't show up in the selection menu.– Seamus
Jan 16 '13 at 13:00