From d32748eb92d52f1163ff560529ac488dfb25a3b7 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Katarina Behrens Date: Thu, 31 Aug 2017 00:14:16 +0200 Subject: tdf#105606: Clarify access to X509 certificate storage * hint to MSIE on Windows, it's perhaps the easiest * MacOSX uses TB/FF storage * point to Tools > Options way to choose which TB/FF profile to use * env. variables are so 90ties Change-Id: I6aef05d1f71f98c71cfcc0278b0e5d373959f0ca Reviewed-on: https://gerrit.libreoffice.org/41743 Reviewed-by: Gabor Kelemen Tested-by: Gabor Kelemen --- source/text/shared/guide/digitalsign_send.xhp | 6 +++--- 1 file changed, 3 insertions(+), 3 deletions(-) diff --git a/source/text/shared/guide/digitalsign_send.xhp b/source/text/shared/guide/digitalsign_send.xhp index 0fd9cc5f09..f487f7748e 100644 --- a/source/text/shared/guide/digitalsign_send.xhp +++ b/source/text/shared/guide/digitalsign_send.xhp @@ -37,12 +37,12 @@ Managing your Certificates -If you are using Microsoft Windows, you can manage your certificates from the Control Panel applet "Internet Options" on the "Contents" tab page. +If you are using Microsoft Windows, you can manage your certificates either from the Control Panel applet "Internet Options" on the "Contents" tab page or from MS Internet Explorer. Import your new root certificate into the Trusted Root Certification Authorities list. -If you are using Solaris or Linux, you must install a recent version of Thunderbird or Firefox to install some system files that are needed for encryption.how about Mac OS X? - If you have created different profiles in Thunderbird or Firefox, and you want %PRODUCTNAME to use one specified profile for certificates, then you can set the environment variable MOZILLA_CERTIFICATE_FOLDER to point to the folder of that specified profile. +If you are using Linux, macOS or Solaris, you must install a recent version of Thunderbird or Firefox. %PRODUCTNAME will then access their certificate storage. + If you have created different profiles in Thunderbird or Firefox and you want to use certificates from one specific user profile, select the profile in Tools - Options - Security - Certificate Path. Alternatively, you can set the environment variable MOZILLA_CERTIFICATE_FOLDER to point to the folder containing that profile. Open your web browser’s preferences, select the Advanced section, click on the Certificates tab, and then choose View Certificates. The Certificate Manager dialog will appear. -- cgit v1.2.3