Revision d40ec4ab8e7c0ff39bf4f9918fbb9dfdca4c5221 authored by Matt Caswell on 10 November 2015, 15:17:42 UTC, committed by Matt Caswell on 10 November 2015, 19:24:20 UTC
If a DTLS client that does not support secure renegotiation connects to an OpenSSL DTLS server then, by default, renegotiation is disabled. If a server application attempts to initiate a renegotiation then OpenSSL is supposed to prevent this. However due to a discrepancy between the TLS and DTLS code, the server sends a HelloRequest anyway in DTLS. This is not a security concern because the handshake will still fail later in the process when the client responds with a ClientHello. Reviewed-by: Tim Hudson <tjh@openssl.org>
1 parent 15a7164
INSTALL.OS2
Installation on OS/2
--------------------
You need to have the following tools installed:
* EMX GCC
* PERL
* GNU make
To build the makefile, run
> os2\os2-emx
This will configure OpenSSL and create OS2-EMX.mak which you then use to
build the OpenSSL libraries & programs by running
> make -f os2-emx.mak
If that finishes successfully you will find the libraries and programs in the
"out" directory.
Alternatively, you can make a dynamic build that puts the library code into
crypto.dll and ssl.dll by running
> make -f os2-emx-dll.mak
This will build the above mentioned dlls and a matching pair of import
libraries in the "out_dll" directory along with the set of test programs
and the openssl application.

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