> Let us not call it the "cookie key", lets use the terminology of the RFC.
Please suggest a file name. >> I'm assuming that the system defaults will cover 99+% of the normal >> cases. I don't have to do anything special for my browser to work. > Because your browser includes its own cert store! Or it was customized for > your distro. There is no "normal" case. I assume the distro provides a reasonable collection of trusted root certificates. It's not only my browser that just works, but also other browsers and lynx and curl and I don't know what else. I don't plan to duplicate that effort. Do you want to? On Fedora, it's the ca-certificates package. Name : ca-certificates Version : 2018.2.26 Release : 2.fc29 Architecture : noarch Size : 943 k Source : ca-certificates-2018.2.26-2.fc29.src.rpm Repository : @System >From repo : fedora Summary : The Mozilla CA root certificate bundle URL : https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/CA-Certificates License : Public Domain Description : This package contains the set of CA certificates chosen by the : Mozilla Foundation for use with the Internet PKI. -- These are my opinions. I hate spam. _______________________________________________ devel mailing list devel@ntpsec.org http://lists.ntpsec.org/mailman/listinfo/devel