Patches item #423820, was updated on 2001-05-13 17:27
You can respond by visiting:
http://sourceforge.net/tracker/?func=detailatid=303152aid=423820group_id=3152
Category: aolserver3_3
Group: None
Status: Open
Resolution: None
Priority: 5
Submitted By: Hal Heisler (hheisler)
Assigned to:
Automatic digest processor wrote:
There is one message totalling 68 lines in this issue.
Topics of the day:
1. [ aolserver-Bugs-423587 ] gmake on FreeBSD 4.3/Aolserver-3.3.1
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Date:Sat, 12 May 2001 10:31:21 -0700
Patches item #423820, was updated on 2001-05-13 17:27
You can respond by visiting:
http://sourceforge.net/tracker/?func=detailatid=303152aid=423820group_id=3152
Category: aolserver3_3
Group: None
Status: Open
Resolution: None
Priority: 5
Submitted By: Hal Heisler (hheisler)
Assigned to:
O.K,
With a little Makefile and source hacking I got nsopenssl.so to
build. (OPENSSL_free isn't in my version of OpenSSL, was it added
later? [tclcmds.c])
Now my problem is that the module fails to load the certfile.pem. I
created my own self-signed certificate using openssl, and from what I
Hi there,
I was wondering what everybody's opinion was on the most stable version of the server
for use in a production environment? I have a production server running version 3.0
on Linux - it handles a CRM (Customer Relations Management) system which deals with
about 10K email messages per
Brian Jones wrote:
Maybe the server truly is
out of memory, but top says otherwise. Do you know the situations in which
this error will occur?
You would have to look at top just before this happened, because after
it happens, most of the memory used by AOLserver will be released. It
seems
Make sure your private key is not passphrase-protected; if it is, it'll
fail to be loaded by the server. You can use openssl to take the passphrase
off, but make sure you lock up this file so that only the server can read
it (root will also be able to read it, obviously):
openssl rsa -in
I've always wondered why servers bother to encrypt the private key. The
passphrase is right there in the server configuration so why bother?
Kris
-Original Message-
From: AOLserver Discussion [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf
Of Scott Goodwin
Sent: Mon, 05-14-01 02:40p
To:
I've always wondered why servers bother to encrypt the private key. The
passphrase is right there in the server configuration so why bother?
I believe that if you use Apache/mod_ssl with an encrypted key, the
server will pause at startup time and prompt you to enter the passphrase
on the
Rob Mayoff wrote:
I believe that if you use Apache/mod_ssl with an encrypted key, the
server will pause at startup time and prompt you to enter the passphrase
on the command line.
The problems with this approach should be obvious...
Particularly when it's a remote server. That
The keyfile was decrypted before I created the CSR. The server dies
trying to load the signed (by me) certificate, even though:
openssl x509 -noout -text -in certfile.pem
Reguritates out the cert information O.K. I guess I failed to mention
I'm using nsopenssl 1.1
I must have an older
I have test platform that contains everything necessary to compile and
configure aolserver, nsopenssl, ssldump in a self-contained area to test
in. If you can't get it working and you want to try out the test suite,
I'll let you know how to download.
/s.
The keyfile was decrypted before I
Bugs item #423587, was updated on 2001-05-12 10:31
You can respond by visiting:
http://sourceforge.net/tracker/?func=detailatid=103152aid=423587group_id=3152
Category: Configuration: Server
Group: aolserver3_3
Status: Open
Resolution: None
Priority: 5
Submitted By: Tyge Cawthon (tyge)
Assigned
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