Thank You Matthew
I did it the old fashion way using pkicreate like you suggested and its working.
On Tue, Jun 3, 2014 at 7:16 PM, Matthew Harmsen <mharmsen(a)redhat.com> wrote:
On 06/03/14 15:49, Paul Robert Marino wrote:
>
> I'm trying to install the RA
>
> when I try to run the following I get
> "
> # pkispawn -s RA -v
> Tomcat:
> Instance [pki-apache]:
> HTTP port [80]:
> Secure HTTP port [443]:
> Traceback (most recent call last):
> File "/usr/sbin/pkispawn", line 530, in <module>
> main(sys.argv)
> File "/usr/sbin/pkispawn", line 148, in main
> parser.read_text('AJP port', config.pki_subsystem,
'pki_ajp_port')
> File
> "/usr/lib/python2.7/site-packages/pki/server/deployment/pkiparser.py",
> line 257, in read_text
> default = self.pki_master_dict[key]
> KeyError: 'pki_ajp_port'
> "
>
> does any one know if this is a known bug new bug or am I using the wrong
> method?
>
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Paul,
The 'pkispawn' tool only works for the Java Tomcat-based PKI subsystems -
CA, KRA, OCSP, or TKS.
Note that TPS instances that are currently undergoing development will also
use this tool.
In order to install a native Apache-based RA (or a legacy TPS) instance, you
must still use the 'pkicreate' installer, and configure the instance using a
browser with the GUI interface or construct the proper arguments to the
'pkisilent' configuration tool.
-- Matt