This is indeed a long standing problem. Mercury really needs the ability to import external certs. Extracting the master password might be possible, but it would be unadvisable to share this here, since this password is the same on every installation of Mercury. A short term solution would be for David Harris to implement a feature in Mercury, so every admin can set it's own Master password. This would allow creating a key file externally, and use it in Mercury.
Also, it was not a very wise decision by Gutmann to use pkcs15 for it's keystore, since this is a format reserved for hardware tokens. Support for this format as a file is very limited, you would have to jump through a few hoops to convert your pem file into a pkcs15 file.
I think I remember David talking about dropping cryptlib and transferring to openssl, but couldn't give a definite estimate if and when this would happen.
Greetings
Markus
<p>This is indeed a long standing problem. Mercury really needs the ability to import external certs. Extracting the master password might be possible, but it would be unadvisable to share this here, since this password is the same on every installation of Mercury. A short term solution would be for David Harris to implement a feature in Mercury, so every admin can set it's own Master password. This would allow creating a key file externally, and use it in Mercury.</p><p>Also, it was not a very wise decision by Gutmann to use pkcs15 for it's keystore, since this is a format reserved for hardware tokens. Support for this format as a file is very limited, you would have to jump through a few hoops to convert your pem file into a pkcs15 file.</p><p>I think I remember David talking about dropping cryptlib and transferring to openssl, but couldn't give a definite estimate if and when this would happen.</p><p>
</p><p>Greetings</p><p>Markus</p><p>
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