On 9/3/18 9:05 PM, Thomás Inskip wrote:
> Does anyone know how I can specify that a specific shared library (in
> this case an engine) is dependent on a system-installed shared library
> (i.e. not built along with openssl)?. Basically the equivalent of
> LDFLAGS += -lsomelib
The GNU runtime dynami
Hi,
When using openssl with X25519, why it shows the server temp key as 253 bits?
Example:
---
No client certificate CA names sent
Peer signing digest: SHA256
Peer signature type: RSA
Server Temp Key: X25519, 253 bits
---
I thought Curve25519 is using 256 bit keys.
Why 253 instead of 256?
wit
> On Sep 4, 2018, at 12:16 AM, James Brown via openssl-users
> wrote:
>
> Running ‘make test’ for 1.1.0i fails with:
>
> Test Summary Report
> ---
> ../test/recipes/80-test_cms.t(Wstat: 256 Tests: 4 Failed: 1)
> Failed test: 4
> Non-zero exit status: 1
> Files
Running ‘make test’ for 1.1.0i fails with:
Test Summary Report
---
../test/recipes/80-test_cms.t(Wstat: 256 Tests: 4 Failed: 1)
Failed test: 4
Non-zero exit status: 1
Files=99, Tests=561, 83 wallclock secs ( 0.94 usr 0.23 sys + 49.59 cusr 22.30
csys = 73.06 CPU)
Using the linux env var LD_PRELOAD, maybe?
Sent from BlueMail
On Sep 3, 2018, 15:05, at 15:05, "Thomás Inskip" wrote:
>Does anyone know how I can specify that a specific shared library (in
>this
>case an engine) is dependent on a system-installed shared library (i.e.
>not
>built along with op
Dear Users,
I have released version 5.49 of stunnel.
Version 5.49, 2018.09.03, urgency: MEDIUM
* New features
- Performance optimizations.
- Logging of negotiated or resumed TLS session IDs (thx
to ANSSI - National Cybersecurity Agency of France).
- Merged Debian 10-enabled.patch and 11
Does anyone know how I can specify that a specific shared library (in this
case an engine) is dependent on a system-installed shared library (i.e. not
built along with openssl)?. Basically the equivalent of LDFLAGS +=
-lsomelib
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Ouch... Spelling Corrector doing is best. The text below should've been:
"... spitting out a pile of error..."
Oh well. Hard to admit, but sometimes automatic correctors are even more
eloquent than me, and seem freeer in their choice of words too. ;-)
Regards,
Uri
Sent from my iPhone
> On Sep
If it builds a dummy engine - then shouldn't a dummy engine respond gracefully
to requests with something like "sorry I can't do anything useful", instead of
spitting outa puke of error messages in response to "openssl engine -t capi"?
Regards,
Uri
Sent from my iPhone
> On Sep 3, 2018, at 12:2
In message <62b8aa9b-d6d2-4f33-94c5-7bfe11e46...@akamai.com> on Mon, 3 Sep 2018
13:56:41 +, "Salz, Rich" said:
> > Gotcha. In that case why does it get built on Mac? I.e., why
> > doesn’t the build process exclude it automatically?
>
> Beats me. It ends up being a zero-length object file, m
On 03/09/18 14:56, Salz, Rich via openssl-users wrote:
> *>*Gotcha. In that case why does it get built on Mac? I.e., why doesn’t
> the build process exclude it automatically?
>
>
>
> Beats me. It ends up being a zero-length object file, more or less.
> Perhaps Richard Levitte knows.
It ski
>Gotcha. In that case why does it get built on Mac? I.e., why doesn’t the build
>process exclude it automatically?
Beats me. It ends up being a zero-length object file, more or less. Perhaps
Richard Levitte knows.
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Seems to be a openssl related issue. Anyone have any ideas as to what this
is?
Note that the url works in a browser.
With wget:
# wget -d https://deb.nodesource.com/setup_8.x
DEBUG output created by Wget 1.19.4 on linux-gnu.
Reading HSTS entries from /home/user/.wget-hsts
URI e
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