diff --git a/extensions/help/resources/locale/en-US/cert_concepts_help.html b/extensions/help/resources/locale/en-US/cert_concepts_help.html deleted file mode 100644 index 6568372bdaf1..000000000000 --- a/extensions/help/resources/locale/en-US/cert_concepts_help.html +++ /dev/null @@ -1,70 +0,0 @@ - -
-[intro text]
- -
- In this section: - - - - - - |
-
- -
[text to come]
- - -- -
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- -- -
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- -[text to come]
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- - - -2/5/2001
-Copyright © 1994-2001 Netscape Communications Corporation.
- - - - - - diff --git a/extensions/help/resources/locale/en-US/cert_dialog_help.html b/extensions/help/resources/locale/en-US/cert_dialog_help.html index d8ee4225b9e1..b35ca059b626 100644 --- a/extensions/help/resources/locale/en-US/cert_dialog_help.html +++ b/extensions/help/resources/locale/en-US/cert_dialog_help.html @@ -10,7 +10,9 @@[intro text]
+This section describes how to use various windows displayed at different times by Certificate Manager. The additional information given here appears when you click the Help button in one of those windows.
+ +[text to come
The Certificate Details window displays information about the certificate you selected in one of the Certificate Manager tabs. You can also click [what? where?] to see a complete text version of the certificate (normally of interest to IS professionals only).
+The Certificate Details window displays information about a certificate you selected in one of the Certificate Manager tabs. -
The Certificate Details window shows the following information about the selected certificate:
+The top panel of the Certificate Details window displays the certificate chain, with the certificate you originally selected at the bottom. A certificate chain is a hierarchical series of certificates signed by successive certificate authorities. A CA certificate identifies a certificate authority (CA) and is used to sign certificates issued by that authority. A CA certificate can in turn be signed by the CA certificate of a parent CA and so on up to a root CA. + +
To examine information for any certificate in the certificate chain, click the its name in the top panel. The corresponding information is displayed in the bottom panel. + + +The bottom panel shows the following information about the selected certificate:
Name. The name of the person or other entity that the certificate identifies.
Common Name. The name of the person or other entity that the certificate identifies.
Organization. The name of the organization to which the entity belongs (such as the name of a company).
Organizational Unit. The name of the organizational unit to which the entity belongs (such as Accounting Department).
[Next two Certificate Details sections are placeholders--not yet sure how UI will look for this.] +
When you click View More Info in the upper-right corner of the View Security Certificate window, a View Certificate Details window opens that displays the complete contents of the certificate. This information is normally of interest to IS professionals only.
- -Certificate Manager displays basic ANSI types in human-readable form wherever possible. For fields whose contents it cannot interpret, Personal Security Manager simply displays the actual values contained in the certificate.
- - - -View Security CertificateIssuer Not Found
- -When you click the name of a certificate's issuer (labeled "Issued Under:") in the View Security Certificate window, a new View Security Certificate window opens with information about the issuer's certificateunless Certificate Manager does not have that certificate on file. In this case, the new window informs you that the issuer's certificate could not be found.
+The Details tab of the Certifiate Details window displays the complete contents of the selected certificate. This information is normally of interest to IS professionals only.
+Certificate Manager displays basic ANSI types in human-readable form wherever possible. For fields whose contents it cannot interpret, Certificate Manager simply displays the actual values contained in the certificate.
@@ -140,7 +141,7 @@ View Certificate Details
Like a credit card, a driver's license, and many other forms of identification, a certificate is valid for a specified period of time. When a certificate expires, you need to get a new oneunless you have decided that you don't need that certificate anymore.
-Certificate Manager displays the Certificate Renewal window when it detects that one of your certificates is about to expire. Information about the certificate is displayed at the top of the window. The information provided includes the name of the CA that issued the certificate (labeled "Issued Under").
+Certifocate Manager displays the Certificate Renewal window when it detects that one of your certificates is about to expire. Information about the certificate is displayed at the top of the window. The information provided includes the name of the CA that issued the certificate (labeled "Issued Under").
The Certificate Renewal window allows you to make one of two decisions:
@@ -183,7 +184,7 @@ View Certificate Details@@ -207,13 +208,13 @@ View Certificate Details
Many web sites use certificates to identify themselves when you visit the site. If Personal Security Manager doesn't recognize the certificate authority (CA) that issued a web site's certificate, it displays the following windows:
+Many web sites use certificates to identify themselves when you visit the site. If Certificate Manager doesn't recognize the certificate authority (CA) that issued a web site's certificate, it displays the following windows:
[following needs updating for new UI
@@ -247,7 +248,7 @@ View Certificate Details
If you believe the certificate's expiration is an inadvertent error, you may want to accept the certificate anyway for this session and let the webmaster for the site know about the problem.
-If you suspect that there may be a more significant problem, either accept the certificate and be cautious about any actions you take while you are visiting the site, or do not accept the certificate (in which case Personal Security Manager will not connect you to the site).
+If you suspect that there may be a more significant problem, either accept the certificate and be cautious about any actions you take while you are visiting the site, or do not accept the certificate (in which case Certificate Manager will not connect you to the site).
@@ -264,7 +265,7 @@ View Certificate Details
3/21/2001
+5/10/2001
Copyright © 1994-2001 Netscape Communications Corporation.