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  2. PKCS 12 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PKCS_12

    Microsoft PFX file format In cryptography , PKCS #12 defines an archive file format for storing many cryptography objects as a single file. It is commonly used to bundle a private key with its X.509 certificate or to bundle all the members of a chain of trust .

  3. PKCS - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PKCS

    See RFC 7292. Defines a file format commonly used to store private keys with accompanying public key certificates, protected with a password-based symmetric key. PFX is a predecessor to PKCS #12. This container format can contain multiple embedded objects, such as multiple certificates. Usually protected/encrypted with a password.

  4. PKCS 7 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PKCS_7

    Windows uses the .p7b file name extension [6] for both these encodings. A typical use of a PKCS #7 file would be to store certificates and/or certificate revocation lists (CRL). Here's an example of how to first download a certificate, then wrap it inside a PKCS #7 archive and then read from that archive:

  5. Certificate-based encryption - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Certificate-based_encryption

    A user Alice can doubly encrypt a message using another user's (Bob) public key and his (Bob's) identity.. This means that the user (Bob) cannot decrypt it without a currently valid certificate and also that the certificate authority cannot decrypt the message as they don't have the user's private key (i.e., there is no implicit escrow as with ID-based cryptography, as the double encryption ...

  6. Privacy-Enhanced Mail - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Privacy-Enhanced_Mail

    PEM data is commonly stored in files with a ".pem" suffix, a ".cer" or ".crt" suffix (for certificates), or a ".key" suffix (for public or private keys). [3] The label inside a PEM file represents the type of the data more accurately than the file suffix, since many different types of data can be saved in a ".pem" file.

  7. Cryptographic Message Syntax - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cryptographic_Message_Syntax

    The architecture of CMS is built around certificate-based key management, such as the profile defined by the PKIX working group. CMS is used as the key cryptographic component of many other cryptographic standards, such as S/MIME , PKCS #12 and the RFC 3161 digital timestamping protocol.

  8. X.690 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/X.690

    CER (Canonical Encoding Rules) is a restricted variant of BER for producing unequivocal transfer syntax for data structures described by ASN.1. Whereas BER gives choices as to how data values may be encoded, CER (together with DER ) selects just one encoding from those allowed by the basic encoding rules, eliminating the rest of the options.

  9. Comparison of data-serialization formats - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_data...

    Ada, C, C++, Java, Cobol, Lisp, Python, Ruby, Smalltalk — D-Bus Message Protocol freedesktop.org — Yes D-Bus Specification: Yes No No Partial (Signature strings) Yes — Efficient XML Interchange (EXI) W3C: XML, Efficient XML Yes Efficient XML Interchange (EXI) Format 1.0: Yes XML: XPointer, XPath: XML Schema: DOM, SAX, StAX, XQuery, XPath —