Show Table of Contents Hide Table of Contents English English Multi-page HTML Single-page HTML PDF ePub Command-Line Tools Guide1. The pkispawn and pkidestroy Utilities1.1. The pkispawn Utility1.1.1. Non-interactive pkispawn Mode1.1.2. Interactive pkispawn Mode1.1.3. Creating Multiple Subsystems Within a Single Instance1.1.4. Shared and Non-shared Instances1.2. The pkidestroy Utility1.2.1. Non-interactive pkidestroy Mode1.2.2. Interactive pkidestroy Mode2. The pki utility2.1. Connection Parameters2.2. Authentication2.3. Paging pki Commands Output2.4. Overview of the Supported pki Commands2.4.1. Client Management with pki client2.4.2. Certificate Management with pki cert2.4.3. User and Group Management with pki user and pki group2.4.4. Group Member and User Membership Management with pki group-member and pki user-membership2.4.5. Security Domain Management with pki securitydomain2.4.6. Key Management with pki key-*2.4.7. KRA Connector Management with pki ca-kraconnector2.4.8. CA Management with pki ca2.4.9. TPS Management with pki tps3. TokenInfo (Managing External Hardware Tokens)3.1. Syntax4. sslget (Downloading Files over HTTPS)4.1. Syntax4.2. Usage5. AuditVerify (Audit Log Verification)5.1. Setting up the Auditor's Database5.2. Syntax5.3. Return Values5.4. Usage5.5. Results6. setpin (Generating Unique PINs for Entities)6.1. The setpin Command6.1.1. Editing the setpin.conf Configuration File6.1.2. Syntax6.1.3. Usage6.2. How setpin Works6.2.1. Input File6.2.2. Output File6.2.3. How PINs Are Stored in the Directory6.2.4. Exit Codes7. AtoB (Converting ASCII to Binary)7.1. Syntax7.2. Usage8. BtoA (COnverting Binary to ASCII)8.1. Syntax8.2. Usage9. PrettyPrintCert (Printing Certificates)9.1. Syntax9.2. Usage10. PrettyPrintCrl (Printing Readable CRLs))10.1. Syntax10.2. Usage11. tkstool (Managing Token Keys)11.1. Syntax11.2. Usage12. CMCRequest (Creating CMC Requests)12.1. Syntax12.2. Usage12.3. Output13. CMCEnroll (Performing CMC Enrollments)13.1. Syntax13.2. Usage13.3. Output14. CMCResponse (Parsing a CMC Response)14.1. Syntax14.2. Usage and Output15. CMCRevoke (Signing a Revocation Request)15.1. Syntax15.2. Testing CMC Revocation15.3. Output16. CRMFPopClient (Sending an Encoded CRMF Request)16.1. Syntax16.2. Usage16.3. Output17. ExtJoiner (Adding Cerificate Extensions to Requests)17.1. Syntax17.2. Usage18. GenExtKeyUsage (Adding the Key Usage Extension to a Request)18.1. Syntax19. GenIssuerAltNameExt (Adding the Issuer Name Extention to a Request)19.1. Syntax19.2. Usage20. SubjectAltNameExt (Adding the Subject Alternative Name Extension to a Request)20.1. Syntax20.2. Usage21. HttpClient (Sends a Request over HTTP)21.1. Syntax22. OCSPClient (Sending an OCSP Request)22.1. Syntax23. PKCS10Client (Generating a PKCS #10 Certificate Request)23.1. Syntax24. PKCS12Export (Exports Certificates and Keys from a Database)24.1. Syntax24.2. Usage and Output25. revoker (Sending Revocation Requests)25.1. Syntax25.2. Output26. tpsclient (Debugging the TPS)26.1. Syntax27. KRATool (Rewrapping Private Keys)27.1. Syntax27.2. .cfg File27.3. Examples27.4. UsageIndexA. Revision HistoryLegal Notice Chapter 7. AtoB (Converting ASCII to Binary) The Certificate System ASCII to binary tool converts ASCII base-64 encoded data to binary base-64 encoded data. 7.1. Syntax The ASCII to binary tool, AtoB, has the following syntax: AtoB input_file output_file Option Description input_file Specifies the path and file to the base-64 encoded ASCII data. output_file Specifies the file where the utility should write the binary output. 6.2.4. Exit Codes 7.2. Usage
Where did the comment section go?
Red Hat's documentation publication system recently went through an upgrade to enable speedier, more mobile-friendly content. We decided to re-evaluate our commenting platform to ensure that it meets your expectations and serves as an optimal feedback mechanism. During this redesign, we invite your input on providing feedback on Red Hat documentation via the discussion platform.