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Results 81 - 90 of 130 for crt (0.03 sec)

  1. helm-releases/minio-1.0.4.tgz

    third party CAs, remember to include Minio's own certificate with key `public.crt`, if it also needs to be trusted. For instance, given that TLS is enabled and you need to add trust for Minio's own CA and for the CA of a Keycloak server, a Kubernetes secret can be created from the certificate files using `kubectl`: ``` kubectl -n minio create secret generic minio-trusted-certs --from-file=public.crt --from-file=keycloak.crt ``` If TLS is not enabled, you would need only the third party CA: ``` kubectl...
    Registered: Sun Nov 03 19:28:11 UTC 2024
    - Last Modified: Wed Aug 25 02:12:51 UTC 2021
    - 13.6K bytes
    - Viewed (0)
  2. helm-releases/minio-1.0.5.tgz

    third party CAs, remember to include Minio's own certificate with key `public.crt`, if it also needs to be trusted. For instance, given that TLS is enabled and you need to add trust for Minio's own CA and for the CA of a Keycloak server, a Kubernetes secret can be created from the certificate files using `kubectl`: ``` kubectl -n minio create secret generic minio-trusted-certs --from-file=public.crt --from-file=keycloak.crt ``` If TLS is not enabled, you would need only the third party CA: ``` kubectl...
    Registered: Sun Nov 03 19:28:11 UTC 2024
    - Last Modified: Wed Aug 25 19:53:57 UTC 2021
    - 13.6K bytes
    - Viewed (0)
  3. helm-releases/minio-2.0.0.tgz

    third party CAs, remember to include Minio's own certificate with key `public.crt`, if it also needs to be trusted. For instance, given that TLS is enabled and you need to add trust for Minio's own CA and for the CA of a Keycloak server, a Kubernetes secret can be created from the certificate files using `kubectl`: ``` kubectl -n minio create secret generic minio-trusted-certs --from-file=public.crt --from-file=keycloak.crt ``` If TLS is not enabled, you would need only the third party CA: ``` kubectl...
    Registered: Sun Nov 03 19:28:11 UTC 2024
    - Last Modified: Thu Aug 26 07:36:46 UTC 2021
    - 13.6K bytes
    - Viewed (0)
  4. helm-releases/minio-5.0.6.tgz

    third party CAs, remember to include MinIO's own certificate with key `public.crt`, if it also needs to be trusted. For instance, given that TLS is enabled and you need to add trust for MinIO's own CA and for the CA of a Keycloak server, a Kubernetes secret can be created from the certificate files using `kubectl`: ``` kubectl -n minio create secret generic minio-trusted-certs --from-file=public.crt --from-file=keycloak.crt ``` If TLS is not enabled, you would need only the third party CA: ``` kubectl...
    Registered: Sun Nov 03 19:28:11 UTC 2024
    - Last Modified: Mon Feb 13 06:53:06 UTC 2023
    - 20.3K bytes
    - Viewed (0)
  5. helm-releases/minio-3.5.4.tgz

    third party CAs, remember to include MinIO's own certificate with key `public.crt`, if it also needs to be trusted. For instance, given that TLS is enabled and you need to add trust for MinIO's own CA and for the CA of a Keycloak server, a Kubernetes secret can be created from the certificate files using `kubectl`: ``` kubectl -n minio create secret generic minio-trusted-certs --from-file=public.crt --from-file=keycloak.crt ``` If TLS is not enabled, you would need only the third party CA: ``` kubectl...
    Registered: Sun Nov 03 19:28:11 UTC 2024
    - Last Modified: Mon Feb 14 06:04:53 UTC 2022
    - 17.2K bytes
    - Viewed (0)
  6. helm-releases/minio-3.5.5.tgz

    third party CAs, remember to include MinIO's own certificate with key `public.crt`, if it also needs to be trusted. For instance, given that TLS is enabled and you need to add trust for MinIO's own CA and for the CA of a Keycloak server, a Kubernetes secret can be created from the certificate files using `kubectl`: ``` kubectl -n minio create secret generic minio-trusted-certs --from-file=public.crt --from-file=keycloak.crt ``` If TLS is not enabled, you would need only the third party CA: ``` kubectl...
    Registered: Sun Nov 03 19:28:11 UTC 2024
    - Last Modified: Wed Feb 16 19:44:53 UTC 2022
    - 17.2K bytes
    - Viewed (0)
  7. helm/minio/values.yaml

    pools: 1
    
    ## TLS Settings for MinIO
    tls:
      enabled: false
      ## Create a secret with private.key and public.crt files and pass that here. Ref: https://github.com/minio/minio/tree/master/docs/tls/kubernetes#2-create-kubernetes-secret
      certSecret: ""
      publicCrt: public.crt
      privateKey: private.key
    
    Registered: Sun Nov 03 19:28:11 UTC 2024
    - Last Modified: Thu Oct 10 15:48:31 UTC 2024
    - 18.8K bytes
    - Viewed (1)
  8. helm-releases/minio-3.6.5.tgz

    third party CAs, remember to include MinIO's own certificate with key `public.crt`, if it also needs to be trusted. For instance, given that TLS is enabled and you need to add trust for MinIO's own CA and for the CA of a Keycloak server, a Kubernetes secret can be created from the certificate files using `kubectl`: ``` kubectl -n minio create secret generic minio-trusted-certs --from-file=public.crt --from-file=keycloak.crt ``` If TLS is not enabled, you would need only the third party CA: ``` kubectl...
    Registered: Sun Nov 03 19:28:11 UTC 2024
    - Last Modified: Wed Apr 13 22:45:54 UTC 2022
    - 18K bytes
    - Viewed (0)
  9. helm-releases/minio-4.0.1.tgz

    third party CAs, remember to include MinIO's own certificate with key `public.crt`, if it also needs to be trusted. For instance, given that TLS is enabled and you need to add trust for MinIO's own CA and for the CA of a Keycloak server, a Kubernetes secret can be created from the certificate files using `kubectl`: ``` kubectl -n minio create secret generic minio-trusted-certs --from-file=public.crt --from-file=keycloak.crt ``` If TLS is not enabled, you would need only the third party CA: ``` kubectl...
    Registered: Sun Nov 03 19:28:11 UTC 2024
    - Last Modified: Mon May 02 06:10:34 UTC 2022
    - 18K bytes
    - Viewed (0)
  10. helm-releases/minio-4.0.9.tgz

    third party CAs, remember to include MinIO's own certificate with key `public.crt`, if it also needs to be trusted. For instance, given that TLS is enabled and you need to add trust for MinIO's own CA and for the CA of a Keycloak server, a Kubernetes secret can be created from the certificate files using `kubectl`: ``` kubectl -n minio create secret generic minio-trusted-certs --from-file=public.crt --from-file=keycloak.crt ``` If TLS is not enabled, you would need only the third party CA: ``` kubectl...
    Registered: Sun Nov 03 19:28:11 UTC 2024
    - Last Modified: Wed Aug 03 06:10:44 UTC 2022
    - 18.6K bytes
    - Viewed (0)
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