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You are free: to share – to copy, distribute and transmit the work; to remix – to adapt the work; Under the following conditions: attribution – You must give appropriate credit, provide a link to the license, and indicate if changes were made.
Oracle proprietary (only pre-compiled binaries are provided, no sources) Enables working as a proxy for BEA/Oracle WebLogic mod_wl_22: Version 2.2: Third-party module: Oracle: Oracle proprietary (only pre-compiled binaries are provided, no sources) Enables working as a proxy for BEA/Oracle WebLogic mod_wl_24: Version 2.4: Third-party module: Oracle
OpenSSL is a software library for applications that provide secure communications over computer networks against eavesdropping, and identify the party at the other end. It is widely used by Internet servers, including the majority of HTTPS websites. OpenSSL contains an open-source implementation of the SSL and TLS protocols.
Programmers reference manual (PDF) Included (pluggable) No BSAFE SSL-J com.rsa.asn1. com.rsa.certj com.rsa.jcp com.rsa.jsafe com.rsa.ssl com.rsa.jsse. Java class loader: Javadoc, Developer's guide (HTML) Included No cryptlib: crypt* makefile, MSVC project workspaces Programmers reference manual (PDF), architecture design manual (PDF)
PKCS #12 files are usually created using OpenSSL, which only supports a single private key from the command line interface. The Java keytool can be used to create multiple "entries" since Java 8, but that may be incompatible with many other systems. [ 8 ]
This table denotes, if a cryptography library provides the technical requisites for FIPS 140, and the status of their FIPS 140 certification (according to NIST's CMVP search, [27] modules in process list [28] and implementation under test list). [29]
Ksplice is an open-source [2] [3] extension of the Linux kernel that allows security patches to be applied to a running kernel without the need for reboots, avoiding downtimes and improving availability (a technique broadly referred to as dynamic software updating).
An attack called POODLE [19] (late 2014) combines both a downgrade attack (to SSL 3.0) with a padding oracle attack on the older, insecure protocol to enable compromise of the transmitted data. In May 2016 it has been revealed in CVE-2016-2107 that the fix against Lucky Thirteen in OpenSSL introduced another timing-based padding oracle. [20] [21]