Index | index by Group | index by Distribution | index by Vendor | index by creation date | index by Name | Mirrors | Help |
The search service can find package by either name (apache), provides(webserver), absolute file names (/usr/bin/apache), binaries (gprof) or shared libraries (libXm.so.2) in standard path. It does not support multiple arguments yet...
The System and Arch are optional added filters, for example System could be "redhat", "redhat-7.2", "mandrake" or "gnome", Arch could be "i386" or "src", etc. depending on your system.
You wrote a cool network client or server. It encrypts connections using TLS. Your test suite needs to make TLS connections to itself. Uh oh. Your test suite probably doesn’t have a valid TLS certificate. Now what? trustme is a tiny Python package that does one thing: it gives you a fake certificate authority (CA) that you can use to generate fake TLS certs to use in your tests. Well, technically they’re real certs, they’re just signed by your CA, which nobody trusts. But you can trust it. Trust me.
Package | Summary | Distribution | Download |
python-trustme-1.2.1-1.noarch.html | #1 quality TLS certs while you wait, for the discerning tester | OpenMandriva Cooker for x86_64 | python-trustme-1.2.1-1.noarch.rpm |
python-trustme-1.2.1-1.noarch.html | #1 quality TLS certs while you wait, for the discerning tester | OpenMandriva Cooker for aarch64 | python-trustme-1.2.1-1.noarch.rpm |
Generated by rpm2html 1.6