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Full Discussion: Tynt Tracer Must Die
Contact Us Post Here to Contact Site Administrators and Moderators Tynt Tracer Must Die Post 302416045 by Neo on Saturday 24th of April 2010 01:03:44 PM
Old 04-24-2010
Quote:
Originally Posted by tyntguy
This button on this link will disable Tynt for the browser you are in:

Tynt Opt In/Out
Hi tyntguy,

I think it would be better if there was a "blanket" configuration option to turn off Tynt for copy-and-paste withing the same site.

In other words, if you are posting on www. unix.com and you cut-and-paste withing the selected domain (www. unix.com to www. unix.com), then we should have a configuration option in the control panel to turn it off for for this "internal" case, because content is not actually "leaving" this site.

---------- Post updated at 17:03 ---------- Previous update was at 16:58 ----------

OBTW, I forgot to mention that one of the site benefits of TYNT is that when a poster double posts by copy and pasting within the site, it does automatically post to the other post. We thought that was a nice unintended "side effect" because it helped with double posting reference back to the original post (and made the mods jobs easier).
 

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BN_num_bytes(3) 						      OpenSSL							   BN_num_bytes(3)

NAME
BN_num_bits, BN_num_bytes, BN_num_bits_word - get BIGNUM size SYNOPSIS
#include <openssl/bn.h> int BN_num_bytes(const BIGNUM *a); int BN_num_bits(const BIGNUM *a); int BN_num_bits_word(BN_ULONG w); DESCRIPTION
BN_num_bytes() returns the size of a BIGNUM in bytes. BN_num_bits_word() returns the number of significant bits in a word. If we take 0x00000432 as an example, it returns 11, not 16, not 32. Basically, except for a zero, it returns floor(log2(w))+1. BN_num_bits() returns the number of significant bits in a BIGNUM, following the same principle as BN_num_bits_word(). BN_num_bytes() is a macro. RETURN VALUES
The size. NOTES
Some have tried using BN_num_bits() on individual numbers in RSA keys, DH keys and DSA keys, and found that they don't always come up with the number of bits they expected (something like 512, 1024, 2048, ...). This is because generating a number with some specific number of bits doesn't always set the highest bits, thereby making the number of significant bits a little lower. If you want to know the "key size" of such a key, either use functions like RSA_size(), DH_size() and DSA_size(), or use BN_num_bytes() and multiply with 8 (although there's no real guarantee that will match the "key size", just a lot more probability). SEE ALSO
bn(3), DH_size(3), DSA_size(3), RSA_size(3) HISTORY
BN_num_bytes(), BN_num_bits() and BN_num_bits_word() are available in all versions of SSLeay and OpenSSL. 50 2013-03-05 BN_num_bytes(3)
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