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Java's build-in support for reading X.509 certificates does not deal well with PIV certificates containing the username as a "serialNumber" attribute. Rather than exposing the string value of that attribute, the Java implementation exposes a byte array that does not fully match the string value shown by a tool like OpenSSL. BouncyCastle, on the other hand, _does_ match the output of OpenSSL, and provides a predictable means of decoding the certificate.
------------------------------------------------------------ About this README ------------------------------------------------------------ This README is intended to provide quick and to-the-point documentation for technical users intending to compile parts of Apache Guacamole themselves. Source archives and pre-built .war files are available from the downloads section of the project website: http://guacamole.apache.org/ A full manual is available as well: http://guacamole.apache.org/doc/gug/ ------------------------------------------------------------ What is guacamole-client? ------------------------------------------------------------ guacamole-client is the superproject containing all Maven-based projects that make Apache Guacamole, an HTML5 web application that provides access to your desktop using remote desktop protocols. guacamole-client is used to build the subprojects that make up Guacamole, and to provide a common central repository. Each project contained here is completely independent of guacamole-client and can be built separately, though the others may have to be built first. If all projects are built using guacamole-client, Maven will take care of the proper build order. ------------------------------------------------------------ Compiling and installing Apache Guacamole ------------------------------------------------------------ Apache Guacamole is built using Maven. Building Guacamole compiles all classes and packages them into a deployable .war file. This .war file can be installed and deployed under servlet containers like Apache Tomcat or Jetty. 1) Run mvn package $ mvn package Maven will download any needed dependencies for building the .jar file. Once all dependencies have been downloaded, the .war file will be created in the guacamole/target/ subdirectory of the current directory. 2) Copy the .war file as directed in the instructions provided with your servlet container. Apache Tomcat, Jetty, and other servlet containers have specific and varying locations that .war files must be placed for the web application to be deployed. You will likely need to do this as root. ------------------------------------------------------------ Reporting problems ------------------------------------------------------------ Please report any bugs encountered by opening a new issue in the JIRA system hosted at: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/GUACAMOLE/
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