> What if, for example, someone has an LDAP server that only supports
> older TLS, and switching to OpenSSL causes their sssd LDAP TLS client to
> require newer TLS because of our stronger defaults? What I describe
> would result in a regression for that user until they reconfigure
> things. Is this a realistic possibility?

First, are we sure that such scenario would currently work in current
NSS?

I can't say whether that's a realistic scenario, we would need metrics,
but I also think that if you're forcing a more secure behavior it's not
to me a regression, it's making people aware that they're misbehaving.

As we do SRU a browser version that no longer accepts a deprecated
crypto mechanisms, potentially causing an user regression, I don't see a
problem in doing it other tools.

It may require an admin action? Yes, but that's acceptable IMHO when the system 
in use is known to be not secure.
And IMHO we're responsible for that too, not just accept people to use unsafe 
methods by default.

> I think you're thinking of functional regressions here (ie. introducing
> actual bugs), whereas I'm more bothered about regressing edge case user
> configurations (eg. introducing a change that requires users to change
> their local configurations to avoid a behavioural regression).

I'm thinking at those too (and especially in my scenario), but given
there's right now no known actual and reported regression (not just in
Ubuntu, but everywhere in the web I've searched for), so while there
might be indeed edge cases until I don't have proofs of them I still
thinking that the proposed change can only cause an improvement.

--

BTW, unrelated to this, but this request mostly is triggered by bug
#1865226, and to support it reliably we need to use open-ssl based
p11_child.

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https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1905790

Title:
  Recompile SSSD in 20.04 using OpenSSL (instead of NSS) support

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