On Sunday 09 December 2001 07:32 pm, Lucky Green <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> The big question is: will FreeS/WAN latest release after some 4 or 5 
> years of development finally both compile and install cleanly on 
> current versions of Red Hat Linux, FreeS/WAN's purported target 
> platform?

The latest releases of both Suse and Mandrake are both able to install kernels with 
Freeswan already integrated.  It's a little newer addition to Mandrake, so you may 
want to use Suse.  Suse makes it easy to set up encrypted file systems and other nice 
features.

The major problem that holds back the development of FreeS/WAN is with its management. 
 [Management that cares more about sitting on its pulpit, than getting useful software 
into the hands of people.] Unless things have changed recently, they still won't 
accept contributions from the US.  This makes no sense.  GPG is shipping with every 
Linux distribution I know of, and the German's take contributions from the US.

The primary kernel developers have been willing to integrate crypto into the kernel 
since the crypto regs were lowered.  It's the policy of no US contributions that's 
holding back Linux IPSEC.

IMHO:  If Freeswan had never been created, an alternate, more mature implementation 
would already exist in the mainline Linux kernel.

--Anonymous

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