Sponsored Content
Special Forums News, Links, Events and Announcements Software Releases - RSS News MLdonkey 2.9.4 (Default branch) Post 302184992 by Linux Bot on Monday 14th of April 2008 01:40:12 AM
Old 04-14-2008
MLdonkey 2.9.4 (Default branch)

Image MLdonkey is a multi-platform, multi-network peer-to-peer client. It supports several large networks such as eDonkey, Overnet, Kademlia, Bittorrent, Gnutella (Bearshare, Limewire, etc.), Gnutella2 (Shareaza), or Fasttrack (Kazaa, Imesh, Grobster). Networks can be enabled or disabled. Searches are performed in parallel on all enabled networks. For some networks, each file can be downloaded from multiple clients concurrently.Image

More...
 
SSL_get_peer_cert_chain(3)					      OpenSSL						SSL_get_peer_cert_chain(3)

NAME
SSL_get_peer_cert_chain - get the X509 certificate chain of the peer LIBRARY
libcrypto, -lcrypto SYNOPSIS
#include <openssl/ssl.h> STACK_OF(X509) *SSL_get_peer_cert_chain(const SSL *ssl); DESCRIPTION
SSL_get_peer_cert_chain() returns a pointer to STACK_OF(X509) certificates forming the certificate chain of the peer. If called on the client side, the stack also contains the peer's certificate; if called on the server side, the peer's certificate must be obtained separately using SSL_get_peer_certificate(3). If the peer did not present a certificate, NULL is returned. NOTES
The peer certificate chain is not necessarily available after reusing a session, in which case a NULL pointer is returned. The reference count of the STACK_OF(X509) object is not incremented. If the corresponding session is freed, the pointer must not be used any longer. RETURN VALUES
The following return values can occur: NULL No certificate was presented by the peer or no connection was established or the certificate chain is no longer available when a session is reused. Pointer to a STACK_OF(X509) The return value points to the certificate chain presented by the peer. SEE ALSO
ssl(3), SSL_get_peer_certificate(3) 1.0.1i 2014-06-05 SSL_get_peer_cert_chain(3)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 01:04 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy