[Sussex] New Horizons (was: SSL)

Macdonald-Wallace, Matthew J s0209208 at glos.ac.uk
Wed Jan 8 16:20:00 UTC 2003


Wish I could help, sorry to hear the news.

If its any consolation, being made redundant in November 2001 was the best
thing that's happened to me, I'm not working in IT anymore, but I have found
something that I wan to do for a living that two years ago would never have
crossed my mind!

Best of Luck,

Matt

>-----Original Message-----
>From: Dominic Clay [mailto:dominic.clay at europrospectus.com]
>Sent: 08 January 2003 15:53
>To: sussex lug
>Subject: [Sussex] New Horizons (was: SSL)
>
>
>
>Cheers for the replys on SSL...
>
><Newsflash>  
>
>I have unfortunately been made redundant today.  
>The work I was planning will therfore not be going ahead :)
>
>It apears even my good intentions of moving the company to an 
>'Open Source'
>platform has been deemed not enough to save them.  I am just one of the
>first few to go...  The company will (in my view) not survive 
>the next 6-8
>months.
>
></Newsflash>
>
>If anyone knows of any work out there for a developer (6/7 
>years VB, ASP,
>COM; 2years Java, J2EE,with excelent server skills (NT, 
>...some Linux :)
>)and Damn fine people/motivation skills :) please let me know. 
> I have a
>mortgage to pay you know :-/...
>
>See you all at the next meet!
>
>Dominic
>
>-----Original Message-----
>From: John Crowhurst [mailto:fyremoon at fyremoon.net] 
>Sent: 08 January 2003 15:26
>To: sussex at mailman.lug.org.uk
>Subject: Re: [Sussex] SSL
>
>
>
>> Dominic,
>>
>> I did this a while back on Redhat 6.2 and Apache.  It involved 
>> downloading the source for Apache and OpenSSL and compiling 
>them both. 
>> If your lucky there might be an rpm out there with SSL support 
>> already, but I couldn't find one at the time.
>
>The problem I've found with RedHat RPMs is that the official 
>ones are way
>out of date. Freshmeat have some compile kits for Apache which 
>include SSL
>and other well used protocols.
>
>> You do not have to purchase a certificate, you can create your own, 
>> but then you are authenticating yourself which is fine for 
>testing or 
>> internal only access.
>
>As long as you aren't planning to run your site for credit 
>card transactions
>or anything people will get upset about your site not having 
>an officially
>signed certificate, you can get away with signing it yourself.
>
>> There is some fairly good documentation in a book that I 
>have at work. 
>> "Linux Apache Web Server Administration" by Charle Aulds.  See here 
>> 
>http://www.amazon.co.uk/exec/obidos/ASIN/0782141>374/ref=sr_aps_books_1
>> _1/026-7439741-5084463
>> for more info.  I have a copy at work which I'll happily 
>lend you, but
>> I'm off till next week so I can't get it before then.
>
>You may find one of the HOWTO's useful on this subject also -
>http://www.tldp.org/ (Apache-Compile-HOWTO is probably the most useful)
>
>--
>John
>
>
>
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