I contacted NLNet Labs, they updated their certs which made NSD fetch on Mojave
work again for me.
Somewhere during my tests accidentally OpenSSL was activated on my machine (a
destroot on nsd 4.3.8 maybe?), which killed all the installed ports that were
dependent on an opensll 1.1.1 dylib (whi
On Sun, 7 Nov 2021, Bill Cole wrote:
So I wonder how widespread this problem is?
The problem in this case is not the existence of the cert in the CA
bundle, but the fact that this particular expired cert was used in an
alternative validation path and the logic of verification for multi-path
On 2021-11-07 at 16:29:30 UTC-0500 (Mon, 8 Nov 2021 08:29:30 +1100
(EST))
Dave Horsfall
is rumored to have said:
On Sun, 7 Nov 2021, Bill Cole wrote:
I have my own Mojave machines working without a problem after
removing the bad certificate from /etc/ssl/cert.pem. The one that
starts like t
On Sun, 7 Nov 2021, Bill Cole wrote:
I have my own Mojave machines working without a problem after removing
the bad certificate from /etc/ssl/cert.pem. The one that starts like
this:
[...]
Intrigued, I checked my own:
mackie:~ dave$ grep "Not After" /etc/ssl/cert.pem
Not A
On 2021-11-07 at 06:40:01 UTC-0500 (Sun, 7 Nov 2021 12:40:01 +0100)
Gerben Wierda via macports-users
is rumored to have said:
The reason is libcurl in Mojave which is less permissive than High
Sierra.
I'm unconvinced of that.
I have my own Mojave machines working without a problem after remo
Actually it was more about curl, using that as a reference point to see if it
was behaving differently with certificates based on user.
André-John
Sent from my phone. Envoyé depuis mon téléphone.
> On 07 Nov 2021, at 01:03, Kastus Shchuka wrote:
>
>
>
>> On Nov 6, 2021, at 7:53 PM, André
On Nov 7, 2021, at 00:03, Kastus Shchuka wrote:
>
> On the other hand, it's plain dumb why it works for me. As you can see below,
> org.macports.fetch does not use HTTPS, it downloads over HTTP. Certificates
> are just irrelevant for that.
>
> I am not sure what part of macports.conf control
The reason is libcurl in Mojave which is less permissive than High Sierra.
Sent from my iPhone
> On 7 Nov 2021, at 03:08, Kastus Shchuka wrote:
>
> Something does not add up here.
>
> High Sierra is older than Mojave, right? I can fetch sources of nsd on High
> Sierra without any problems:
>
Hi.
Just out of interest I’ve tried to fetch nsd on my Mojave
Absolutely standard MacPorts installation
MacBook-Pro:~ mashavecher$ sudo port -d fetch nsd
Password:
DEBUG: Copying /Users/mashavecher/Library/Preferences/com.apple.dt.Xcode.plist
to /opt/local/var/macports/home/Library/Preferences
DEB
> On Nov 6, 2021, at 7:53 PM, André-John Mas wrote:
>
> Does it make a difference if you test via sudo or your own user login?
>
Well, it won't work as regular user. Regular user does not have write
permissions to /opt/local tree.
On the other hand, it's plain dumb why it works for me. As
Does it make a difference if you test via sudo or your own user login?
André-John
Sent from my phone. Envoyé depuis mon téléphone.
> On 06 Nov 2021, at 22:08, Kastus Shchuka wrote:
>
> Something does not add up here.
>
> High Sierra is older than Mojave, right? I can fetch sources of nsd on
Something does not add up here.
High Sierra is older than Mojave, right? I can fetch sources of nsd on High
Sierra without any problems:
$ sudo port -d fetch nsd
DEBUG: Copying /Users/pike/Library/Preferences/com.apple.dt.Xcode.plist to
/opt/local/var/macports/home/Library/Preferences
DEBUG
On Nov 6, 2021, at 05:39, Gerben Wierda wrote:
> I was looking at updating nsd (for which I am maintaining and it is high time)
>
> But fetching failed on macOS Mojave (where I have my MacPorts setup).
>
> :debug:fetch Executing org.macports.fetch (nsd)
> :info:fetch ---> nsd-4.3.8.tar.gz do
I was looking at updating nsd (for which I am maintaining and it is high time)
But fetching failed on macOS Mojave (where I have my MacPorts setup).
:debug:fetch Executing org.macports.fetch (nsd)
:info:fetch ---> nsd-4.3.8.tar.gz does not exist in
/opt/local/var/macports/distfiles/nsd
:notice:
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