[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Interchange by date
][Interchange by thread
]
[ic] Internet Explorer 6.0.2600.0000IC and W2K can'tdisplay a secure page
At 02:38 PM 8/7/2002 -0400, you wrote:
>>If you are really running 0.9.6, then it is almost two years old (Sep 24
>>2000). The latest version (July 30 2002) is 0.9.6e. Also, Joachim,
>>2.8.10 is actually the version of mod_ssl, could you check the openssl version?
>>Like I said earlier, I had this problem until I upgraded openssl.
>>+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
>>| Dan Browning, Kavod Technologies <db@kavod.com>
>>+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
>
>Ok we may be onto something here. I'm running Redhat 7.1, and have applied
>the openssl update from their Aug 5, 2002 security update, which includes
>these rpms:
>
>openssl095a-0.9.5a-18.i386.rpm
>openssl-0.9.6-13.i386.rpm
>openssl-devel-0.9.6-13.i386.rpm
>openssl-perl-0.9.6-13.i386.rpm
>openssl-python-0.9.6-13.i386.rpm
>
>Now I'm not used to this rpm stuff (I'm really a Slackware guy) so I'm not
>sure what these version numbers really mean. BUT when I go into my IC
>Admin GUI and click Info, then Environment I see this:
>
> 'SERVER_SOFTWARE' => 'Apache/1.3.26 (Unix) PHP/4.2.0
> FrontPage/5.0.2.2510 mod_ssl/2.8.9 OpenSSL/0.9.6',
>
>So... if this is the latest rpm, what can I do to upgrade to 0.9.6e?
>
>DB
Unless I'm wrong [why do I bother with that prefix when it is always
applicable?], the RPM upgrade only has 0.9.6 + a few patches, so it is
still the 2-year old version. However, to be absolutely sure, it would be
best to recompile apache from source with the latest openssl. To do so,
follow the instructions on http://www.modssl.org/example/.
You'll need to stop your regular Apache before starting the new one, as
they both can't bind to the same port (alternatively, you could configure
the second Apache for something like port 3000 and then test on that port
without interfering with your regular Apache). Good luck.
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
| Dan Browning, Kavod Technologies <db@kavod.com>
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
ADA, n.:
Something you need only know the name of to be an Expert in
Computing. Useful in sentences like, "We had better develop an ADA
awareness."