How to extract the fields (Country, State, … E-mail) from a p12 file without password
I have a file.p12 which contains the private key protected with a password (that i have not) and the public certificate.
I have tried the following commands in the cmd of windows:
pkcs12 -in file.p12 -clcerts -nokeys -out publicCert.pe
But it require the private passwords.
security certificate key public-key-encryption private-key
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I have a file.p12 which contains the private key protected with a password (that i have not) and the public certificate.
I have tried the following commands in the cmd of windows:
pkcs12 -in file.p12 -clcerts -nokeys -out publicCert.pe
But it require the private passwords.
security certificate key public-key-encryption private-key
add a comment |
I have a file.p12 which contains the private key protected with a password (that i have not) and the public certificate.
I have tried the following commands in the cmd of windows:
pkcs12 -in file.p12 -clcerts -nokeys -out publicCert.pe
But it require the private passwords.
security certificate key public-key-encryption private-key
I have a file.p12 which contains the private key protected with a password (that i have not) and the public certificate.
I have tried the following commands in the cmd of windows:
pkcs12 -in file.p12 -clcerts -nokeys -out publicCert.pe
But it require the private passwords.
security certificate key public-key-encryption private-key
security certificate key public-key-encryption private-key
asked Nov 23 '18 at 20:28
JamesJames
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Generally speaking, you can't.
While a PFX supports many different configurations, the default is to encrypt the private keys with 3DES-CBC and the certificates with RC2/40-CBC; each encrypted segment uses the password as input into a formula to produce a different cryptographic key.
So your two easiest options are to know the password, or to try to crack the RC2 payloads.
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1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
Generally speaking, you can't.
While a PFX supports many different configurations, the default is to encrypt the private keys with 3DES-CBC and the certificates with RC2/40-CBC; each encrypted segment uses the password as input into a formula to produce a different cryptographic key.
So your two easiest options are to know the password, or to try to crack the RC2 payloads.
add a comment |
Generally speaking, you can't.
While a PFX supports many different configurations, the default is to encrypt the private keys with 3DES-CBC and the certificates with RC2/40-CBC; each encrypted segment uses the password as input into a formula to produce a different cryptographic key.
So your two easiest options are to know the password, or to try to crack the RC2 payloads.
add a comment |
Generally speaking, you can't.
While a PFX supports many different configurations, the default is to encrypt the private keys with 3DES-CBC and the certificates with RC2/40-CBC; each encrypted segment uses the password as input into a formula to produce a different cryptographic key.
So your two easiest options are to know the password, or to try to crack the RC2 payloads.
Generally speaking, you can't.
While a PFX supports many different configurations, the default is to encrypt the private keys with 3DES-CBC and the certificates with RC2/40-CBC; each encrypted segment uses the password as input into a formula to produce a different cryptographic key.
So your two easiest options are to know the password, or to try to crack the RC2 payloads.
answered Nov 24 '18 at 16:07
bartonjsbartonjs
13.6k12455
13.6k12455
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