On Mon, Apr 27, 2015 at 10:04 PM, Nick suckless-...@njw.me.uk wrote:
It totally does. Visit https://njw.me.uk and see the U in the SSL
section of the status bar
Thanks. I did not notice this 'U'.
Change `static char *strictssl` to true and rebuild,
I get a SSL handshake error if
On Wed, Mar 25, 2015 at 12:16 AM, Nick suckless-...@njw.me.uk wrote:
Hi Jakukyo,
Quoth Jakukyo Friel:
How to manage SSL certificates in surf?
If you're just talking about choosing which CAs to accept, surf uses
the ca-certificates bundle your distro provides
Hmm, 0.4.1 does not support
Quoth Jakukyo Friel:
Just tried with the latest commit (b4ca032),
surf does not warn about invalid SSL certs.
It totally does. Visit https://njw.me.uk and see the U in the SSL
section of the status bar, and compare to the T for
https://njw.name.
Change `static char *strictssl` to true and
Hi Jakukyo,
Quoth Jakukyo Friel:
How to manage SSL certificates in surf?
What do you mean, manage? If you mean use certificates for
authentication (Personal Certificates) surf doesn't support that
currently.
If you're just talking about choosing which CAs to accept, surf uses
the
Nick wrote:
What do you mean, manage? If you mean use certificates for authentication
(Personal Certificates) surf doesn't support that currently.
Heyho,
I wanted to implement that some time ago, but found neither webkit nor soup seem
to support personal certificates for authentication.
Quoth Markus Teich:
Nick wrote:
What do you mean, manage? If you mean use certificates for authentication
(Personal Certificates) surf doesn't support that currently.
I wanted to implement that some time ago, but found neither webkit nor soup
seem
to support personal certificates for
How to manage SSL certificates in surf?
Have not found a way to configure this.
I'm using surf-0.4.1 on Ubuntu 14.04.
Thanks.