Sponsored Content
Operating Systems Solaris Sun ONE Web Server 6.1 - enable SSL? Post 50892 by AJD on Tuesday 4th of May 2004 08:42:38 PM
Old 05-04-2004
Sun ONE Web Server 6.1 - enable SSL?

I've upgraded Iplannet 4.1 to Sun ONE Web Server 6.1. However. Now i can't seem to connect on port 4443 which was originally being used in 4.1 to deal with transactions....when i try to run a query on this port (4443) i get the following error:

Access to the server was denied

I suspect i haven't enable the port correctly???

Any ideas????

Thanks

Andy Smilie
 

2 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Solaris

Sun as a web server!

Hi folks! I'm using a Sun station as a management station for another network. The Sun has a capability to be accesed by a PC or another machine via web browser (Netscape is prefered). BUT, when I try to do that, from the PC I receive the massage "Unable to connect to Netbinder Server!". Can... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: igorgog
1 Replies

2. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

to enable POP3(ssl) and SMTP(ssl) in Squid

i have configured Squid proxy server in Fedora 8 with two network interfaces. HTTP, HTTPS, FTP are working fine but we are unable to download mails using mail clients from mail server with POP3(ssl) and SMTP(ssl). so please someone help us how to enable pop and smtp in Squid. (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: praneel2k
1 Replies
Net::Server::Proto::SSL(3)				User Contributed Perl Documentation				Net::Server::Proto::SSL(3)

NAME
Net::Server::Proto::SSL - Net::Server SSL protocol. SYNOPSIS
Until this release, it was preferrable to use the Net::Server::Proto::SSLEAY module. Recent versions include code that overcomes original limitations. See Net::Server::Proto. See Net::Server::Proto::SSLEAY. use base qw(Net::Server::HTTP); main->run( proto => 'ssl', SSL_key_file => "/path/to/my/file.key", SSL_cert_file => "/path/to/my/file.crt", ); # OR sub SSL_key_file { "/path/to/my/file.key" } sub SSL_cert_file { "/path/to/my/file.crt" } main->run(proto = 'ssl'); # OR main->run( port => [443, 8443, "80/tcp"], # bind to two ssl ports and one tcp proto => "ssl", # use ssl as the default ipv => "*", # bind both IPv4 and IPv6 interfaces SSL_key_file => "/path/to/my/file.key", SSL_cert_file => "/path/to/my/file.crt", ); # OR main->run(port => [{ port => "443", proto => "ssl", # ipv => 4, # default - only do IPv4 SSL_key_file => "/path/to/my/file.key", SSL_cert_file => "/path/to/my/file.crt", }, { port => "8443", proto => "ssl", ipv => "*", # IPv4 and IPv6 SSL_key_file => "/path/to/my/file2.key", # separate key SSL_cert_file => "/path/to/my/file2.crt", # separate cert SSL_foo => 1, # Any key prefixed with SSL_ passed as a port hashref # key/value will automatically be passed to IO::Socket::SSL }]); DESCRIPTION
Protocol module for Net::Server based on IO::Socket::SSL. This module implements a secure socket layer over tcp (also known as SSL) via the IO::Socket::SSL module. If this module does not work in your situation, please also consider using the SSLEAY protocol (Net::Server::Proto::SSLEAY) which interfaces directly with Net::SSLeay. See Net::Server::Proto. If you know that your server will only need IPv4 (which is the default for Net::Server), you can load IO::Socket::SSL in inet4 mode which will prevent it from using Socket6 and IO::Socket::INET6 since they would represent additional and unsued overhead. use IO::Socket::SSL qw(inet4); use base qw(Net::Server::Fork); __PACKAGE__->run(proto => "ssl"); PARAMETERS
In addition to the normal Net::Server parameters, any of the SSL parameters from IO::Socket::SSL may also be specified. See IO::Socket::SSL for information on setting this up. All arguments prefixed with SSL_ will be passed to the IO::Socket::SSL->configure method. BUGS
Until version Net::Server version 2, Net::Server::Proto::SSL used the default IO::Socket::SSL::accept method. This old approach introduces a DDOS vulnerability into the server, where the socket is accepted, but the parent server then has to block until the client negotiates the SSL connection. This has now been overcome by overriding the accept method and accepting the SSL negotiation after the parent socket has had the chance to go back to listening. LICENCE
Distributed under the same terms as Net::Server THANKS
Thanks to Vadim for pointing out the IO::Socket::SSL accept was returning objects blessed into the wrong class. perl v5.18.2 2013-01-09 Net::Server::Proto::SSL(3)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 04:35 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy