Thank you Rich.


The sentence you couldn't understand is my bad, s/b:



"In fact, on some, even non-AIX hosts, permissions would suggest that the 
permission error should be returned."



Dave



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Dave McLellan, Enterprise Storage Software Engineering, EMC Corporation, 176 
South St.

Mail Stop 176-V1 1/P-36, Hopkinton, MA 01749

Office:    508-249-1257, FAX: 508-497-8027, Mobile:   978-500-2546, 
dave.mclel...@emc.com

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-----Original Message-----
From: openssl-users [mailto:openssl-users-boun...@openssl.org] On Behalf Of 
Salz, Rich
Sent: Thursday, January 22, 2015 1:22 PM
To: openssl-users@openssl.org
Subject: Re: [openssl-users] missing default /usr/local/ssl/openssl.cnf causes 
failure on AIX, warning on all others



> None of the hosts we've visited have /usr/local/ssl, not to mention the 
> actual default file.  In fact, on some, even non-AIX hosts, permissions would 
> suggest that the permission should be returned.



Not sure what that last sentence means.



> Should this be happening? Is AIX simply less forgiving, and returns  a more 
> serious error.   Or is the openssl CLI handling the missing file differently 
> on AIX?



I can well believe that AIX is, exactly that, less forgiving and returns 
different error codes than many other Unices.   There is no AIX-specific code 
in openssl around file access.  Trying "ls -ld" on /usr and /usr/local and 
/usr/local/ssl and checking errno might be interesting.

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