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author | Eduardo Chappa <chappa@washington.edu> | 2020-01-15 23:35:18 -0700 |
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committer | Eduardo Chappa <chappa@washington.edu> | 2020-01-15 23:35:18 -0700 |
commit | a6feb748e22af1b8cf032c08e91c2424c44ebd62 (patch) | |
tree | eb9c9d60ef869b59ca9b07a6dfa558f66b4ec785 /libressl/libressl/README | |
parent | ebd6d96bae32c48d9633c45d3bc8c403789c0d6c (diff) | |
download | alpine-a6feb748e22af1b8cf032c08e91c2424c44ebd62.tar.xz |
* clean up the libressl directory.
Diffstat (limited to 'libressl/libressl/README')
-rw-r--r-- | libressl/libressl/README | 48 |
1 files changed, 0 insertions, 48 deletions
diff --git a/libressl/libressl/README b/libressl/libressl/README deleted file mode 100644 index c8ce75b5..00000000 --- a/libressl/libressl/README +++ /dev/null @@ -1,48 +0,0 @@ -The windows version of Alpine can be compiled with LibreSSL. The build -script will compile using LibreSSL if there is a libressl folder in the -main Alpine source code directory. If you rename or remove this folder, -Alpine will be compiled using the default SSL libraries in your computer. - -There are pros and cons to every decision. Here are the pros and cons to -building using LibreSSL. - -Pros: - - * LibreSSL can be updated at any time. This will make it possible to - build Alpine with the latest features of LibreSSL. If you decide to - not use LibreSSL, your SSL libraries will eventually not be updated. - - * Certificates can be updated at any time, and so you can run your - favorite version of Alpine for many years, even after your Windows - version is not supported anymore. - - * You get S/MIME support in Windows for free. - -Cons: - - * LibreSSL will check certificates not using the certificates installed - in your Windows computer, but it will use those saved in - C:\libressl\ssl]certs. This means that it is the responsibility of the - user to update the certificates. No matter what choice is made, if - certificates are not updated, validation will always eventually fail. - -Default Certificates Location: - - * When Alpine is compiled with LibreSSL support, certificates must be - placed in the C:\\libressl\ssl\certs directory. You can find a copy - of certificates in the git repository in the libressl/certs directory. - All you have to do is to copy the certificates in that directory to - the C:\\libressl\ssl\certs directory. - - * In order to make it easy to distribute certificates, each certificate - is distributed twice. Once with a long name, and another with the - short name. The short name is called the "subject hash". A unix script - called "doit.sh" can be used to create the short name. You can run - such script, from this directory by using the command - - ./doit.sh - - and copy the resulting files with short names, to the - C:\\libressl\ssl\certs folder. You only need the files with the short - names, but both are distributed. - |