Debian always builds Exim against GnuTLS, in its “heavy” variation, but I’ve 
always resisted by building against OpenSSL (and, incidentally, taken the time 
to tweak it for me). On the face of it that’s fine, except …

Is there really a good reason? I do it chiefly because I like OpenSSL’s cipher 
selection (I want very permissive, ordered by @STRENGTH, and TLS 1.3 would be 
nice). There were also horror stories about RNG entropy starvation caused by 
GnuTLS.

It’s tedious. I don’t put compilers on my server, and I don’t much enjoy 
setting up a build environment just to compile Exim against stable libraries 
and headers. It also makes upgrading much harder.

I appreciate that this is borderline a Debian question, but since there are 
presumably experienced users of both libraries here, do you think Exim+GnuTLS 
is actually viable and that if I were to switch to the prebuilt binaries and 
adapt to GnuTLSisms it would be adequate for a quiet personal server?

Cheers,
Sabahattin


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