On 11/26/24 12:59, Mario Marietto wrote:
2)
# apt install nvidia-detect nvidia-driver
You first did an `update`.
Also the wiki at [1] suggest to install other PKGs.
[1]
https://www.reddit.com/r/debian/comments/1h08w9v/ssl_error8002system_libraryno_such/?rdt=41730
--
John Doe
On Mon, Sep 23, 2024 at 7:13 PM Andrew Wood wrote:
>
> Is there a way to get MariaDB on Bookworm to log verbosely everything
> to do with connection attempts in order to try and debug why a client
> keeps getting error 2026 SSL connection error: protocol version mismatch?
I typically use OpenSS
Thanks Andy.
I certainly did reply to the wrong email, apologies to all.
George.
On Tuesday, 24-09-2024 at 08:43 Andy Smith wrote:
Hi,
You seem to have hit reply on the wrong message so this appears in a
different thread. I've attempted to stitch it back to the other thread
with a Referen
Hi,
You seem to have hit reply on the wrong message so this appears in a
different thread. I've attempted to stitch it back to the other thread
with a References: header, but I might have got that wrong. The other
thread started at
.
On Tue, Sep 24, 2024 at 08:23:05AM +1000, George at Clug wrote:
Andrew,
I was not even aware of the move from NTP to NTPsec. Thanks for
posting. I should [fully] read the release notes.
https://www.debian.org/releases/bookworm/amd64/release-notes/ch-information.en.html#changes-to-packages-that-set-the-system-clock
5.1.2. Changes to packages that set the syst
On Fri, Jan 14, 2022 at 08:24:51PM -0500, Karen Lewellen wrote:
> Hi folks,
> In an effort to be part of the solution for my shell service provider, I
> have a question.
> We are getting ssl certificate not trusted errors, which I understand post
> issues at the end of November, can be corrected
Harald Dunkel wrote:
> [-- text/plain, encoding 7bit, charset: utf-8, 60 lines --]
> On 2020-07-27 13:49, Sven Hartge wrote:
>>
>> Does your MTA present a client certificate? Maybe buxtehude does not
>> like that?
>>
> Yes, it has a certificate. Whether buxtehude likes it I cannot say,
> but i
On 2020-07-27 13:49, Sven Hartge wrote:
Does your MTA present a client certificate? Maybe buxtehude does not
like that?
Yes, it has a certificate. Whether buxtehude likes it I cannot say,
but it looks OK to me. Its a wildcard certificate, though:
Certificate:
Data:
Version: 3 (0
Harald Dunkel wrote:
> On 2020-07-27 11:17, Sven Hartge wrote:
>> Debian uses their own CA to sign this certificate, which is fine for
>> SMTP, which normally only uses opportunistic encryption.
>>
>> But if the client SMTP-Server is set to *verify* the certificate, it
>> will fail.
> Certific
On 2020-07-27 11:17, Sven Hartge wrote:
Debian uses their own CA to sign this certificate, which is fine for
SMTP, which normally only uses opportunistic encryption.
But if the client SMTP-Server is set to *verify* the certificate, it
will fail.
Certificate verification is optional on my MTA
Reco wrote:
> On Mon, Jul 27, 2020 at 10:43:11AM +0200, Harald Dunkel wrote:
>> I've got a ssl handshake problem with bugs.debian.org on sending an EMail.
>> My mta (OpenBSD 6.7, i.e. libressl) in the office says in its logfile
>>
>> :
>> Jul 27 10:23:39 gate5a smtpd[67056]: d4df9298d18e1596 mta
Hi.
On Mon, Jul 27, 2020 at 10:43:11AM +0200, Harald Dunkel wrote:
> Hi folks,
>
> I've got a ssl handshake problem with bugs.debian.org on sending an EMail.
> My mta (OpenBSD 6.7, i.e. libressl) in the office says in its logfile
>
> :
> Jul 27 10:23:39 gate5a smtpd[67056]: d4df9298d18e1
On Wed, Jun 13, 2018 at 10:30:52AM -, Dan Purgert wrote:
> Bringing this back to the list, in case anyone else has any
> suggestions ...
>
> culser wrote:
> > gee Dan
> >
> > thank you for such a fast response
> >
> > ok so i am downloading Debian 9.4.0 AMD DVD now.
> >
> > should i upgrade t
Bringing this back to the list, in case anyone else has any
suggestions ...
culser wrote:
> gee Dan
>
> thank you for such a fast response
>
> ok so i am downloading Debian 9.4.0 AMD DVD now.
>
> should i upgrade the existing server or build a new server with the
> new 9.4
Personally, I'd go wit
culser wrote:
> [...]`
> my current Debian is 4.1.2-25, Kernel 2.6.26-2 Amd, Apache 2, Postfix
Debian 4, as in Etch, which has been obsolete for 8 years now?
Yes, yes you absolutely need to upgrade.
--
|_|O|_| Registered Linux user #585947
|_|_|O| Github: https://github.com/dpurgert
|O|O|O| PG
Hi.
On Sun, Feb 18, 2018 at 07:30:06AM +, Jonathan de Boyne Pollard wrote:
> Reco:
>
> > Browsers do certificate validation, "wrong IP address" would be possible
> > if the third party somehow produced a valid certificate for
> > wiki.debian.org (you have to be a CA *or* the governmen
On Sat, Apr 15, 2017 at 08:11:13PM +0300, Reco wrote:
Hi,
> AFAIK jessie is the last Debian release that provides curl linked with
> openssl.
We've three flavour of libcurl in the archive and the current "default"
is the one linked against openssl.
libcurl3 - easy-to-use client-side URL transfer
On Thu, Apr 13, 2017 at 09:04:01PM +0100, Darac Marjal wrote:
> It looks[1] like Squid can do SSL Interception. I imagine it should be
> possible, therefore, for squid to perform the HTTPS connection and
> either downgrade it to HTTP or to re-encrypt it with a lower grade. YMMV
Well automatic down
Hi.
On Sat, 15 Apr 2017 15:14:29 + (UTC)
david...@freevolt.org wrote:
> On Fri, 14 Apr 2017, Reco wrote:
>
> > Hi.
> >
> > On Thu, Apr 13, 2017 at 01:01:24PM -0400, Greg Wooledge wrote:
> >> On Thu, Apr 13, 2017 at 11:54:32AM -0500, Martin McCormick wrote:
> >>> This started out
On Fri, 14 Apr 2017, Reco wrote:
Hi.
On Thu, Apr 13, 2017 at 01:01:24PM -0400, Greg Wooledge wrote:
On Thu, Apr 13, 2017 at 11:54:32AM -0500, Martin McCormick wrote:
This started out a year or so ago with the occasional site in
which lynx would report that it was unable to establish a
Hi.
On Thu, Apr 13, 2017 at 01:01:24PM -0400, Greg Wooledge wrote:
> On Thu, Apr 13, 2017 at 11:54:32AM -0500, Martin McCormick wrote:
> > This started out a year or so ago with the occasional site in
> > which lynx would report that it was unable to establish a TLS
> > connection with thi
Greg Wooledge writes:
> Apparently all of the terminal-based browsers in wheezy and jessie are
> linked with libgnutls instead of libopenssl, and libgnutls (at least as
> provided by jessie) is completely incapable of forming an SSL connection
> with half of the Web.
>
> Every time someone in IRC
It looks[1] like Squid can do SSL Interception. I imagine it should be
possible, therefore, for squid to perform the HTTPS connection and
either downgrade it to HTTP or to re-encrypt it with a lower grade. YMMV
[1] http://wiki.squid-cache.org/Features/HTTPS
On 13/04/17 18:01, Greg Wooledge wrote
On Thu, Apr 13, 2017 at 11:54:32AM -0500, Martin McCormick wrote:
> This started out a year or so ago with the occasional site in
> which lynx would report that it was unable to establish a TLS
> connection with this or that site. [...]
It's not just lynx. It's EVERY single terminal-based browser
On Thu, 09 Mar 2017, Jonathan Dowland wrote:
> On Thu, Mar 09, 2017 at 10:38:32AM +0100, Jorick Astrego wrote:
> > On 03/09/2017 10:36 AM, Jorick Astrego wrote:
> > > Just letting you know the ssl certificate on archive.debian.net "uses
> > > an invalid security certificate. The certificate expir
On Thu, Mar 09, 2017 at 10:38:32AM +0100, Jorick Astrego wrote:
> On 03/09/2017 10:36 AM, Jorick Astrego wrote:
> > Just letting you know the ssl certificate on archive.debian.net "uses
> > an invalid security certificate. The certificate expired on 02/19/2017
> > 05:25 AM. The current time is 03
On 03/09/2017 10:36 AM, Jorick Astrego wrote:
> Hi,
>
> Just letting you know the ssl certificate on archive.debian.net "uses
> an invalid security certificate. The certificate expired on 02/19/2017
> 05:25 AM. The current time is 03/09/2017 10:32 AM. (Error code:
> sec_error_expired_certificate
Marko Randjelovic wrote:
> When I use elinks (Squeeze) with
>
> set connection.ssl.cert_verify = 1
>
> $ elinks -dump https://webmail.sbb.rs/
> ELinks: SSL error
Ah! Very good. That explains why it didn't complain for me.
connection.ssl.cert_verify [0|1] (default: 0)
Verify
On Fri, Feb 06, 2015 at 11:08:29PM -0700, Bob Proulx wrote:
> Marko Randjelovic wrote:
> > When I use links2 or elinks web browsers on some websites when https is
> > https://webmail.sbb.rs/
>
> elinks does not complain about the site. This may be a bug in elinks
> as it may be ignoring an error.
On Fri, 6 Feb 2015 23:08:29 -0700
Bob Proulx wrote:
> Marko Randjelovic wrote:
> > When I use links2 or elinks web browsers on some websites when https is
> > https://webmail.sbb.rs/
>
> elinks does not complain about the site. This may be a bug in elinks
> as it may be ignoring an error.
>
>
Marko Randjelovic wrote:
> When I use links2 or elinks web browsers on some websites when https is
> https://webmail.sbb.rs/
elinks does not complain about the site. This may be a bug in elinks
as it may be ignoring an error.
I am able to recreate that problem using links2. And also curl and
wg
On Thu, 5 Feb 2015 14:06:47 -0700
Bob Proulx wrote:
> Marko Randjelovic wrote:
> > When I use links2 or elinks web browsers on some websites when https is
> > protocol I get error "Error loading ... SSL error" and page is not
> > loaded.
>
> This is probably due to the combination of supported p
Marko Randjelovic wrote:
> When I use links2 or elinks web browsers on some websites when https is
> protocol I get error "Error loading ... SSL error" and page is not
> loaded.
This is probably due to the combination of supported protocols. When
negotiating the encryption it may not have an over
On Thu, 16 Aug 2012 12:57:01 +0200, Mauro wrote:
> I've installed ssl-cert package and I've found between others a
> ssl-cert-snakeoil.pem and ssl-cert.snakeoil.key that I use for my https
> servers.
> Is that a sort of default certificate?
"man make-ssl-cert" it explains very well ;-)
Greetings
Hi
On Thu, Aug 16, 2012 at 11:57:01AM +0100, Mauro wrote:
> Hello.
> I've installed ssl-cert package and I've found between others a
> ssl-cert-snakeoil.pem and ssl-cert.snakeoil.key that I use for my
> https servers.
> Is that a sort of default certificate?
Yes - IIRC it is a simple self-signed
01.08.2012 16:43, Benjamin Martin:
> Do you think its worth sending an email (or posting) to OpenSSL to
> inform them of the issue? (I guess it could be bug)
Though I don't think that people will get hurt if you send a mail to the
OpenSSL folks, I'm not sure if you tell them something new. There
On 01/08/12 14:59, Markus Schönhaber wrote:
The important difference between the two machines is probably the
different versions of OpenSSL. Wheezy has OpenSSL 1.0.1 which introduces
new TLS protocols (TLS v1.1, v1.2).
The server seems to be unable to cope with those new protocols.
Thanks for th
01.08.2012 14:30, Benjamin Martin:
> I am having trouble connecting to a https url from machine A but not
> from machine B.
>
> Both machines are on the same network, but machine A is debian-testing
> and machine B is ubuntu 10.04. (both 64bit)
The important difference between the two machines
certs already installed, thanx!
one more question:
i would like to redirect https://*.mydomain.com to
https://secure.mydomain.com in lighttpd.
any suggestions?
On 2011.01.07. 20:17, Camaleón wrote:
On Fri, 07 Jan 2011 19:14:34 +0100, Informatik.hu wrote:
Do you know a cheap, safe and well
On Fri, 07 Jan 2011 19:14:34 +0100, Informatik.hu wrote:
> Do you know a cheap, safe and well known trusted ssl certificate
> provider? I would like to use it with lighttpd, postfix and dovecot.
This is what I use for apache2 (https), cyrus (pop3s/imaps) and postfix
(smtps):
http://www.rapidssl
Look at this one: www.startssl.com
On 01/07/2011 07:14 PM, Informatik.hu wrote:
Hi!
Do you know a cheap, safe and well known trusted ssl certificate provider?
I would like to use it with lighttpd, postfix and dovecot.
thx!
--
To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-user-requ...@lists.debian.org
On Mon, 2010-08-09 at 11:31 +0200, Jesus arteche wrote:
> Hello,
>
> Anyone knows if it's possible to authenticate an user with ...user,
> pass and a personal certificateI mean, each user has name, pass
> and a certificate to login in aplication.
>
> Thanks
You need to elaborate what an "app
In , Jesus
arteche wrote:
>Anyone knows if it's possible to authenticate an user with ...user, pass and
>a personal certificateI mean, each user has name, pass and a certificate
>to login in aplication.
It certainly is possible.
However, it is non-trivial to convert an application from user/
Yes, I imported the CA certificate in my browser.
At this point, I don't know if there is a problem with the certificate or
the setup of Apache.
thanks,
On Sat, Feb 20, 2010 at 10:13 PM, Stephen Powell wrote:
> On Sat, 20 Feb 2010 21:14:36 -0500 (EST), Bernard Fay wrote:
> > I create a CA certi
On Sat, 20 Feb 2010 21:14:36 -0500 (EST), Bernard Fay wrote:
> I create a CA certificate and site certificate according to
> http://www.debian-administration.org/articles/618.
>
> I set it up in Apache under Debian Lenny.
>
> When I try to access the site, I receive the following message:
>
> Se
Title: Re: Re: SSL problem + Apache 1.3.33
Hi all,
I had a problem with the same symptoms, and in my case I got read of it by fixing virtual host definition. See below two VH sections; one of them doesn't work and the other works fine. Hope It can be usefull.
this doesn
On Fri, Aug 19, 2005 at 11:45:36AM +0200, Belikov Anton wrote:
>
> Hi All,
> I have the same problem with Apache 2 / mod_ssl under Red Hat. Can you please
> give me a hint. What was the reason in this case? I also can use
> http://myserver:443 while https://myserver doesn't work and I see in
>
Title: Re: Re: SSL problem + Apache 1.3.33
Hi All,
I have the same problem with Apache 2 / mod_ssl under Red Hat. Can you please give me a hint. What was the reason in this case? I also can use http://myserver:443 while https://myserver doesn't work and I see in acces
On Sun, Apr 18, 2004 at 12:23:09AM -0400, Linux Nick wrote:
> Does anyone know of an easy way to create SSL certs and keys in debian? Im
> having a time with it.
http://www.onlamp.com/pub/a/onlamp/2003/02/06/linuxhacks.html
Try this one.
Or if you need it for apache mod_ssl:
http://www.modssl.org/
On Sat, Apr 10, 2004 at 07:51:54PM -0400, Lorenzo Prince wrote:
> Whenever I go to a secure site in lynx I get the following seemingly harmless
> error:
>
> SSL error:Can't find common name in certificate-Continue? (y)
>
> I say that the error seems harmless because if I hit y or any other key e
On Wed, Feb 04, 2004 at 05:02:52PM +0100, Jens Benecke wrote:
> So: anybody know a graphical (preferably) client, that can do FTP over SSL
> or tunneled via SSH?
Just about any ftp client or a (WWW) browser. Maybe you'd have to
install the non-US variant (if there is anything like non-US in your
On Tue, Feb 10, 2004 at 08:42:28PM -0600, Michael Sullivan wrote:
> Why don't you use sftp? (installed with ssh)
> scp is also included with ssh. you can securely transfer files either
> interactively or through scripting
sftp itself is not very handy, no reconnect support build in (afaik) s
Why don't you use sftp? (installed with ssh)
scp is also included with ssh. you can securely transfer files either
interactively or through scripting
--
To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Jens Benecke wrote:
>Jeff Self wrote:
>
>>Using apt-cache, I found ftp-ssl.
>
>Me too. But it doesn't work, and the admins just auto-reply with
>"install Windows and use our provided clients" to all requests, even
>though their servers run Linux themselves.
Look what I found:
$ apt-cache search
Colin Watson wrote:
> On Wed, Feb 04, 2004 at 05:02:52PM +0100, Jens Benecke wrote:
>> Hi,
>>
>> our department server allows FTP sessions only via SSH2 tunnel (which
>> only commercial SSH.com SSH2 can do)
>
> OpenSSH can open SSH2 tunnels too, surely?
OpenSSH cannot tunnel FTP sessions. The p
Jeff Self wrote:
> Using apt-cache, I found ftp-ssl.
Me too. But it doesn't work, and the admins just auto-reply with "install
Windows and use our provided clients" to all requests, even though their
servers run Linux themselves.
[EMAIL PROTECTED]:~$ ftp-ssl backftp.unibw-hamburg.de
Connected t
On Saturday 07 February 2004 03:10 pm, Curtis Vaughan wrote:
> I would like to set up a mail server in a DMZ that would accept mail
> only from those clients who have authenticated using SSL.
Do you mean authenticate using username/password over SSL, or authenticate
using an SSL certificate?
If
Sven Hoexter wrote:
> On Wed, Feb 04, 2004 at 07:23:55PM +0100, Jens Simmoleit wrote:
>> >
>> > So: anybody know a graphical (preferably) client, that can do FTP over
>> > SSL or tunneled via SSH?
>> >
> lftp
> yftp
> gftp
gftp can not do SSH tunnels.
And it apparently cannot cope with FTP-over-
Sven Hoexter wrote:
On Wed, Feb 04, 2004 at 07:23:55PM +0100, Jens Simmoleit wrote:
So: anybody know a graphical (preferably) client, that can do FTP over SSL
or tunneled via SSH?
lftp
yftp
gftp
Sven
The lftp in stable is somewhat crippeled regarding https.
if you add something like
On Wed, Feb 04, 2004 at 07:23:55PM +0100, Jens Simmoleit wrote:
> >
> > So: anybody know a graphical (preferably) client, that can do FTP over SSL
> > or tunneled via SSH?
> >
lftp
yftp
gftp
Sven
--
If God passed a mic to me to speak
I'd say stay in bed, world
Sleep in peace
[The Cardigans -
>
> So: anybody know a graphical (preferably) client, that can do FTP over SSL
> or tunneled via SSH?
>
Hi,
maybe this can help you. I know one which works with ssh, it's called
WinSCP and can be downloaded here (and also the sources for this app)
http://winscp.sourceforge.net/eng/
It's ope
On Wed, 2004-02-04 at 11:02, Jens Benecke wrote:
> Hi,
>
> our department server allows FTP sessions only via SSH2 tunnel (which only
> commercial SSH.com SSH2 can do) or SSL tunnel (which no client I know of
> can do).
>
> I know lots and lots of FTP _servers_ that can do SSL, and in fact the FT
On Wed, Feb 04, 2004 at 05:02:52PM +0100, Jens Benecke wrote:
> Hi,
>
> our department server allows FTP sessions only via SSH2 tunnel (which only
> commercial SSH.com SSH2 can do)
OpenSSH can open SSH2 tunnels too, surely?
> or SSL tunnel (which no client I know of can do).
>
> I know lots and
On Thursday 29 January 2004 09:24 pm, Matthew Joyce wrote:
> Can anyone comment on www.instantssl.com certs ?
> any problems with them ?
> In fact can anyone recommend cheap ssl certs ?
I've looked at using Thawte - I don't know what your definition of "cheap"
is, but they are cheaper than VeriS
Francisco Castellon <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> 1. (*) text/plain ( ) text/html
(Please configure your mailer to send only plain text, not HTML.)
> I am wanting to be able to use SSL on my current apache installation
> (version 1.3.26). However I was doing some reading on
On Sat, 2003-07-19 at 13:28, Ismael Valladolid Torres wrote:
> Not being an SSL guru, I suggest you using apache-ssl. You will end up
> with two separate servers with separate config and log files, and this
> will help you on not messing things (not a single conflict!).
Yes! Then you get to ma
Francisco Castellon escribio el 19/07/03 20:14:
I am wanting to use SSL on apache and I am a bit confused as to how to
go about it. I know that I could use CPAN to install *mod_ssl* but then
is that all I need or is that the best route to go? I also saw that
Debian has a package (Apt-cache show)
Thus spake Francisco Castellon:
> Hello list:
>
> I am wanting to use SSL on apache and I am a bit confused as to how to
> go about it. I know that I could use CPAN to install mod_ssl but then is
CPAN is an archive for Perl modules. An Apache module != a Perl module.
> that all I need or is th
On Wed, Mar 12, 2003 at 11:02:00AM -0600, linux stuff wrote:
> yes, thank you ... i realized i had omitted the subject and re-sent the
> message
>
> as i understand it, it's not the actually install, which should work fine
> the way you propose, but the configuration and getting a certificate
On Thu, Feb 20, 2003 at 03:17:00PM -0500, Narins, Josh wrote:
> I'm thinking you want, as Rob suggested, scp.
>
> You can think of it as the old rcp program, but it uses ssh.
>
> It can even be used in ways ftp can not(?)
Well scp not realy but the ssh sftp subsystem can. Quite usefull in
conjunc
ine to another, securely)
> -Original Message-
> From: Tinus Kotze [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
> Sent: Thursday, February 20, 2003 11:11 AM
> To: Rob Weir
> Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Subject: Re: SSL Encrypiton
>
>
> Thanks for the reply.
>
> I know abo
Thanks for the reply.
I know about the limitations of gftp. I was looking for a wrapping
utility or even something ftp-ssl. I had another reply which directed me
to tlswrap. The problem is that there seems to be a communication error.
[~]$ ftp 127.0.0.1 7000
Connected to 127.0.0.1.
220 TLSWRAP
On Tue, Feb 18, 2003 at 01:11:16PM +0200, Tinus Kotze wrote:
> I am interested in SSL encryption. I am on a LAN with ftp servers using
> SSL encryption(implecit) and some are using standard text. Is it
> possible to access the ssl ftp servers from debian with a GUI like gFTP?
That of course depe
Hi Bob,
the actual URL is now http://www.pingx.net/secpanel/
What do you mean by "Secpanel never prompts me for a password!"? When
connecting by SSH or SCP?
What do you see in the xterm-Window after connecting? Could you send me
some screenshots?
Thanks
Steffen
Bob Paige wrote:
If I reme
If I remember correctly secpanel is a nice gui for ssh/scp.
I use ssh every day so I thought I'd try secpanel. It does *look* nice,
but I can't get it to connect. To get into our corporate network we have
security cards that generate unique passwords for each connection.
Secpanel never pro
On Thu, 2003-02-06 at 11:19, Calber Chainy wrote:
> I'm looking for a program to transfer files using ssl, but I couldn't
> find one that fits my needs.
If I remember correctly secpanel is a nice gui for ssh/scp.
Bye
--
Haim
--
To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
with a subject of "u
Calber Chainy wrote:
Hello list,
I'm looking for a program to transfer files using ssl, but I couldn't
find one that fits my needs.
Can anyone help me?
not sure what you mean by file transfer over ssl - most web browsers,
email programs etc do this to some extent !
maybe you mean ssh ?
may
* Vineet Kumar ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
> Some news servers require authentication via username/password, which is
> often the same username/password used to authenticate to the ISP and its
> POP server.
>
thats right, our dept uses our unix acct for pop/nntp as well.
iain
--
To UNSUBSCRIBE,
* Paul Johnson ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
> Just curious, but why would you want to encrypt something that's going
> to be public after the first hop anyway?
>
our dept has some internal (private) ngs that i need access to.
i suppose i could do something nasty where i use my isp newsserver at
ho
* Paul Johnson ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) [021230 16:57]:
> On Mon, Dec 30, 2002 at 12:16:26AM +, iain d broadfoot wrote:
> > what newsreaders support ssl nntp servers? i'm currently using slrn, but
> > it's a bit irritating for me.
>
> Just curious, but why would you want to encrypt something that's
On Mon, Dec 30, 2002 at 12:16:26AM +, iain d broadfoot wrote:
> what newsreaders support ssl nntp servers? i'm currently using slrn, but
> it's a bit irritating for me.
Just curious, but why would you want to encrypt something that's going
to be public after the first hop anyway?
--
.''`.
* Glyn Millington ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
> If I understand the manual aright then Gnus supports SSL - but that
> might require a change of editors too?
>
it does, but that'd require a change of user.
:D
i'm flexible, but not enough to use emacs...
iain
--
To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL
iain d broadfoot <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> * Mark Janssen ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
>> If your willing to change newsreaders you could try out 'PAN'. It's
>> great for binaries and quite good for text groups too. It supports SSL.
>>
>
> i'm very willing to change. :D
If I understand the man
* Mark Janssen ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
> If your willing to change newsreaders you could try out 'PAN'. It's
> great for binaries and quite good for text groups too. It supports SSL.
>
i'm very willing to change. :D
i tried pan, but i couldn't see any sign of ssl support.
damn these tired ey
On Mon, 2002-12-30 at 01:16, iain d broadfoot wrote:
> hey listers.
>
> what newsreaders support ssl nntp servers? i'm currently using slrn, but
> it's a bit irritating for me.
If your willing to change newsreaders you could try out 'PAN'. It's
great for binaries and quite good for text groups to
* nate ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
> you can use stunnel to ssl-enable any nntp reader, though I have not tried
> stunnel for this purpose, nor have I read newsgroups in years so .
>
>
> from the manpage:
> -n proto
>Negotiate SSL with specified protocol
>
>current
On Mon, Dec 30, 2002 at 12:16:26AM +, iain d broadfoot wrote:
> what newsreaders support ssl nntp servers?
You could use stunnel's client mode and the newsreader of your choice.
--
Colin Watson [[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
--
To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECT
iain d broadfoot said:
> hey listers.
>
> what newsreaders support ssl nntp servers? i'm currently using slrn, but
> it's a bit irritating for me.
>
> i'm almost tempted to start using mozillanews again. :p
>
> i think i've tried all the clients in debian that i can see, but if anyone
> has any sol
* Tom Allison ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) [021217 17:24]:
> This might sound kind of simple... I hope it is...
>
> If I have a website (eg: www.mydomain.com) and I create a
> certificate for it, I am asked to enter in the server name for the
> certification.
> I typically would enter server.mydomain.c
On Fri, 8 Mar 2002, curtis wrote:
> Any ideas why enabling SSL support for webmin through the webmin browser
> doesn't work? I have uninstalled and reinstalled webmin many times
> thinking something just must not have gotten installed right, but that's
> apparently not the issue.
>
> I should not
Apparently, on Sat, Mar 09, 2002 at 12:37:11AM +, Andrew Pritchard wrote:
> > Any ideas why enabling SSL support for webmin through the webmin browser
> > doesn't work? I have uninstalled and reinstalled webmin many times
> > thinking something just must not have gotten installed right, but t
> Any ideas why enabling SSL support for webmin through the webmin browser
> doesn't work? I have uninstalled and reinstalled webmin many times
> thinking something just must not have gotten installed right, but that's
> apparently not the issue.
>
> I should note that there are no firewalls b
* Andrew Pollock <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [2001.10.25 15:11:47+1000]:
> Is it possible to do SSL'ed Sendmail easily with Debian (like for example,
> it is with IMAPS)
there is *always* stunnel.
postfix, exim, and zmailer all come with TLS versions, TLS being a
better choice anyway, since SSL has long
On Sat, Sep 22, 2001 at 11:58:44PM +0200, Tarjei Huse wrote:
> b) Will the non-US stuff ever be merged with the rest of debian?
Possibly. There's been a team looking at how safe it would be to do this
for a while now. It's all rather delicate, especially in the current US
climate.
--
Colin Watso
Hia,
I usually build my own .debs :) For a very fine guide to all things ssl,
ekrberos and ldap, have a look here:
http://www.bayour.com. Mr. Turbo has done a great job making it easyer to rock
with debian.
I was just looking for a simple way to let my debs be the domain of apt-get :).
If I am
What I am wondering about is:
a) Does anyone maintain ssl versions of nss-, pam- ldap and openldap 2.0.1x?
Hello,
Over the last two days I just completed converting my development
environment to a fully LDAP NSS/PAM environment in preparation of
converting the entire data center.
I used t
on Sat, Sep 22, 2001 at 11:58:44PM +0200, Tarjei Huse ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
> Hi list,
>
> I've been using debian for about 1 month now, but with 2 yrs rh
> experience, so I'm not completely new.
>
> What is frustrating me though is the us / non us divide on crypto and
> that many core pack
%% "'Dave Sherohman'" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
ds> I removed telnetd-ssl when I discovered this because I couldn't
ds> find a way to turn the fallback behaviour off.
Probably someone already said this (I can't figure out why _some_ of my
email is taking 3 days to reach me :-/), but you mus
On Wed, Nov 22, 2000 at 08:06:51PM +, Miquel van Smoorenburg wrote:
Hi Mike, hi to *
|In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
|Jan- Hendrik Palic <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
|>When Mozilla or galeon provide good ssl- connections, then, I hope, I'm able
|>to throw the F** Netscape 4* away... :)
|
|
In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
Jan- Hendrik Palic <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>When Mozilla or galeon provide good ssl- connections, then, I hope, I'm able
>to throw the F** Netscape 4* away... :)
Well, M18 crashes more often than NS4 still, and it uses quite a bit
of memory as well:
USER
1 - 100 of 113 matches
Mail list logo