Error 111 is the value of the libc errno variable that Linux sets for
refused socket connections.

My experience with them generally suggests that the listener at the other
end isn't.  Listening, that is (i.e. no server socket to connect to).

Dave Neuer

-----Original Message-----
From: Ralf S. Engelschall <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: Tuesday, August 31, 1999 3:18 PM
Subject: Re: no connection with https


>On Tue, Aug 31, 1999, Hung Nguyen wrote:
>
>> When I run openssl s_clent -connect localhost:443 I get an error,
>> connect: Connection refused
>> connect:errno=111
>>
>> What is the error code number=111? I looked in the documentations but I
can
>> not find what it is.
>
>111? Usually there is no such errno code. They are usually values between 1
>and 32 or a little bit higher only.  Seems like a strange platform or a bug
in
>OpenSSL. At least you now know that on port 443 Apache seems to not
listening.
>Check your "Listen" and "<VirtualHost>" sections.  And if all fails, start
>from scratch with a fresh Apache source tree and follow carefully the
mod_ssl
>INSTALL document.  It then _WILL_ work, doubt me.
>
>                                       Ralf S. Engelschall
>                                       [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>                                       www.engelschall.com
>______________________________________________________________________
>Apache Interface to OpenSSL (mod_ssl)                   www.modssl.org
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>

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