another thing to note, having restarted a couple of days ago with TLS off,
I see in the infostats GUI average CPU usage at 5%.
After updating with PPM, I did a server restart, turned on TLS, and sent
over a 11mb attachment from google.  CPU average usage at 27%.

On Fri, Jun 10, 2016 at 2:47 PM, K Post <nntp.p...@gmail.com> wrote:

> I gave updating via ppm a go, but I'm nearly certain that all libraries
> used by ASSP were already up to date.    Still right around 2MB per minute
> vs 75+ without TLS on.
>
> ppm log gave me only:
> 2016-06-10T14:04:47 <3> [InstallArea.pm:412] Rollback File conflict for
> 'C:/Perl
> /html/site/lib/ExtUtils/Command.html'. The package ExtUtils-Command has
> already
> installed a file that package ExtUtils-MakeMaker wants to install. at
> C:/Perl/li
> b/ActivePerl/PPM/InstallArea.pm line 573.
> 2016-06-10T14:04:47 <3> [ppm:1259] File conflict for
> 'C:/Perl/html/site/lib/ExtU
> tils/Command.html'. The package ExtUtils-Command has already installed a
> file th
> at package ExtUtils-MakeMaker wants to install. at
> C:/Perl/lib/ActivePerl/PPM/In
> stallArea.pm line 573.
> 2016-06-10T14:14:59 <3> [InstallArea.pm:412] Rollback File conflict for
> 'C:/Perl
> /html/site/lib/CGI/Carp.html'. The package CGI.pm has already installed a
> file t
> hat package CGI wants to install. at
> C:/Perl/lib/ActivePerl/PPM/InstallArea.pm l
> ine 573.
> 2016-06-10T14:14:59 <3> [ppm:1259] File conflict for
> 'C:/Perl/html/site/lib/CGI/
> Carp.html'. The package CGI.pm has already installed a file that package
> CGI wan
> ts to install. at C:/Perl/lib/ActivePerl/PPM/InstallArea.pm line 573.
>
> Nothing notable there right?
>
> Are you using ActiveState perl?  If so, what version?
>
> Does OpenSSL come in to play at all?  I know that's needed for generating
> certificates, and is listed as an ASSP requirement, but is it used in TLS
> transmissions or is that all on the perl libraries?  Are you using OpenSSL
> - if so what version and from where.  I've got the Shining light compiled
> binaries installed.
>
> The backend mail server (hmailserver which ultimately passes most mail
> onto exchange) isn't configured with SSL. That's the same server that's
> used for non-TLS sessions (obviously).  Can you explain what that server
> could be doing to slow down TLS sessions to ASSP?
>
> I'm really at a loss here.  Keeping TLS off isn't a real option, but
> turning it on with this speed isn't realistic.  Thanks all for your input!
>
> On Fri, Jun 10, 2016 at 2:43 AM, Grayhat <gray...@gmx.net> wrote:
>
>> :: On Thu, 9 Jun 2016 12:37:26 -0400
>> :: <CALhpkAnBjGc9rn+JhT2Oe2SK4hrVhkEQG928s5V=bed7p+e...@mail.gmail.com>
>> :: K Post <nntp.p...@gmail.com> wrote:
>>
>> > Windows 2012 R2
>> > the certificate is a 2048 bit RSA cert
>> >
>> > SSL_Version is SSLv23:!SSLv3:!SSLv2
>> > Cipher list
>> > is
>> >
>> kEECDH+ECDSA:kEECDH:kEDH:HIGH:+SHA:+RC4:RC4:!aNULL:!eNULL:!LOW:!3DES:!MD5:!EXP:!DSS:!PSK:!SRP:!kECDH:!CAMELLIA128:!IDEA:!SEED
>>
>> now, this is strange, I'm running the latest ASSP on a windows box
>> using the same ciphers as above and never noticed such a slowdown
>> affecting encrypted connections
>>
>> Try running a
>>
>> ppm upgrade --install
>>
>> on the box, then, once the upgrade completes, run a
>>
>> ppm log --errors 60
>>
>> check for errors, fix them and rerun the upgrade; also, are you sure
>> the issue isn't caused by the backend mailserver ? I know it sounds
>> a bit strange but I'd try checking that portion of the chain too
>>
>>
>>
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>
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