On Wed, Apr 26, 2000 at 02:46:19PM -0500, Leland V. Lammert wrote:
At 12:53 PM 4/26/00, you wrote:
Of course, nothing is as secure as a human being typing the passphrase in
at startup, but we've established that that is too much like hard work :).
Sorry, .. but you missed the point. If you
On Wed, Apr 26, 2000 at 02:46:19PM -0500, Leland V. Lammert wrote:
At 12:53 PM 4/26/00, you wrote:
Of course, nothing is as secure as a human being typing the passphrase in
at startup, but we've established that that is too much like hard work :).
Sorry, .. but you missed the point. If
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John, I have 600 sites, each with their own key/cert and 16 servers (soon
to be 32 servers) how can I possibly plan on entering the passphrase in
for each site on each server on startup?
David Lang
On Wed, 26 Apr 2000, John Hartnup
wrote:
Of course,
At 12:53 PM 4/26/00, you wrote:
Of course, nothing is as secure as a human being typing the passphrase in
at startup, but we've established that that is too much like hard work :).
Sorry, .. but you missed the point. If you are rebooting a server:
1) In many cases the person doing the
"David" == David Lang [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
David John, I have 600 sites, each with their own key/cert and 16 servers (soon
David to be 32 servers) how can I possibly plan on entering the passphrase in
David for each site on each server on startup?
You hire more people, and avoid re-boots.
On Wed, Apr 26, 2000 at 02:46:19PM -0500, Leland V. Lammert wrote:
Of course, nothing is as secure as a human being typing the passphrase in
at startup, but we've established that that is too much like hard work :).
Sorry, .. but you missed the point. If you are rebooting a server:
1) In