The setpin Command
The setpin Command
You run the PIN Generator by entering the
a command shell and monitoring the output in the shell window. This section gives
the syntax for the
generating PINs and storing them in your authentication directory, see section
"Configuring Authentication for End-User Enrollment" in Chapter 15, "Setting Up
End-User Authentication" of CMS Installation and Setup Guide.
Command-Line Syntax
Use the following command in a Unix or DOS command shell:
setpin [arguments]
setpin [optfile=filename] [param1] [param2]
Arguments
The
setpin
setpin
[host=<host_name> [port=<port_number>]]
["binddn=<user_id>"
[objectclass=<objectclass_to_add>]
[attribute=<attribute_name_for_pins>]
["filter=<LDAP_search_filter>"]
[input=<file_name>]
[length=<PIN_length> | minlength=<minimum_PIN_length>
maxlength=<maximum_PIN_length>]
[gen=RNG-alpha | RNG-alphanum | RNG=printableascii]
[case=upperonly]
[hash=sha1 | md5 | none]
[output=<file_name>]
[clobber]
[write]
[saltattribute=<LDAP_attribute_to_use_for_salt_creation>]
[debug]
A description for each argument follows:
•
[host=<host_name> [port=<port_number>]]
<host_name>
<port_number>
is the default LDAP port, 389.
28
Netscape Certificate Management System Command-Line Tools Guide • March 2002
command and its arguments. For instructions on
setpin
command takes the following arguments and options:
bindpw=<bind_password>]
specifies the LDAP directory to connect to.
specifies the TCP/IP port to bind to; the default port number
command and its arguments in
setpin