On Thu, Mar 23, 2000, Steve Kotsopoulos wrote:
Are the environment variables (such as SSL_CLIENT_CERT
and SSL_CIPHER_USEKEYSIZE) available to apache C module writers?
If not, is there another mechanism to look them up?
If your module processes in a late API phase (after fixup or in fixup
On Wed, Mar 22, 2000, Metronet Technical Support wrote:
I've recently been trying to get the third-party module mod_bandwidth.so to function
in the
copy of apache-modssl I'm running, but I've had no luck.
Originally, I was running v 1.3.9 of mod_ssl. However, as it was installed as an
On Fri, Mar 24, 2000, jleung wrote:
We have Apache 1.3.12 with mod_ssl-2.6.1-1.3.12, and secure and non-secure
web server running on the same Solaris box. The SSL had been working fine
for weeks before the system rebooted a couple of days ago. Now, we
couldn't connect to the secure server,
All,
Sorry if such message should not be sent here... If
so,ignore and delete it! :-)
I
recently brought over the Win32 binaries packaged on Mar 14th, 2000:
Apache_1.3.12-mod_ssl_2.6.1-openssl_0.9.5-WIN32-i386.zip
Unfortunetaly, I can't the HTTPS server running... In
fact, I didn't
I was wondering if mod_ssl can handle the proxy svr as a client to a
backend web server. In other words, when the proxy svr passes a browser
request to a backend web server, the backend web server requires a
client certificate as well as passing the proxy svr it's own server
certificate. In this
On Fri, Mar 24, 2000, folivas wrote:
I was wondering if mod_ssl can handle the proxy svr as a client to a
backend web server. In other words, when the proxy svr passes a browser
request to a backend web server, the backend web server requires a
client certificate as well as passing the proxy
On Fri, 24 Mar 2000, Eli Marmor wrote:
Jan Meijer wrote:
A hacker can copy your key, no matter if it is encrypted or not; It
will just spend one more minute for him.
Perhaps I'm missing something here, but if your key is encrypted and the
only way to decrypt it is to actally