Hello,
I use xupnpd2-mediaserver (http://xupnpd.org/xupnpd2_en.html) on my
router to display HLS-streams on my TV.
Some HLS-streams require a https-connection. I contacted the
xupnpd2-author several times but I didn't get a reply. Since some days,
he published the source
Hello,
Several months ago I had configured ansible to deploy openssl upgrades to
our Ubuntu 14.04 servers and did so with the following version via apt
module:
- libssl-dev=1.1.0h-2.0+ubuntu14.04.1+deb.sury.org+1
- openssl=1.1.0h-2.0+ubuntu14.04.1+deb.sury.org+1
Now when doing
On 03/11/2018 10:11, Hanno Böck wrote:
On Sat, 3 Nov 2018 12:28:02 +0500
Марк Коренберг wrote:
Try openssl cms ( as newer alternative to s/mime)
cms is not newer than s/mime, it's the underlying message format of
s/mime.
According to this
On 03/11/2018 08:56, Walter H. wrote:
Hello,
it is a little bitte weird/strange/complicated;
On 02.11.2018 23:05, Matt Caswell wrote:
On 02/11/2018 21:51, Walter H. wrote:
Hello,
when I try to connect tohttps://www.3bg.at/
I get the following error
Handshake with SSL server failed:
On 05/11/2018 15:56, Michael Wojcik wrote:
From: openssl-users [mailto:openssl-users-boun...@openssl.org] On Behalf
Of lu zhihong
Sent: Thursday, November 01, 2018 05:58
when complie openssl 1.1.1 on linux 32bit platform, i met some compile
warning,like:
On 05/11/2018 07:20, Thulasi Goriparthi wrote:
For such tests, it's always better safe than sorry.
Not sure, if repeating the same test (or the test of the same value)
would add any safety.
The safety is in avoiding creating some situation where its tested
zero times because each test
> From: openssl-users [mailto:openssl-users-boun...@openssl.org] On Behalf
> Of lu zhihong
> Sent: Thursday, November 01, 2018 05:58
>
>when complie openssl 1.1.1 on linux 32bit platform, i met some compile
> warning,like:
>
> crypto/ec/curve448/curve448_tables.c:415:
> integer constant is too
> From: openssl-users [mailto:openssl-users-boun...@openssl.org] On Behalf Of
> Nicholas Papadonis
> Sent: Saturday, November 03, 2018 13:03
> https://security.stackexchange.com/questions/182277/is-openssl-aes-256-cbc-encryption-safe-for-offsite-backup
Thanks. Yes, that's talking about the CBC