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OPENBSD_2_6
deraadt 25 years ago
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1deb2c5aa4
1 changed files with 21 additions and 3 deletions
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      src/etc/root/root.mail

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src/etc/root/root.mail View File

@ -61,10 +61,28 @@ available on our FTP servers (as described above). In particular, we provide
the USA and international versions of PGP. The filenames are:
pgp-intl-2.6.3-tgz pgp-usa-2.6.3-tgz
Two OpenBSD libraries (libssl and libcrypto, based on OpenSSL) implement many
cryptographic functions which are used by OpenBSD programs like ssh, httpd, and
isakmpd. Due to patent licensing reasons, full versions of those libraries may
not be included on the CD -- instead the base distribution contains libraries
which have had a few troublesome routines removed -- the programs listed above
will not be fully functional as a result. Libraries which _include_ the
troublesome routines are available and can be FTP installed, as long as you meet
the follow (legal) criteria:
(1) Outside the USA, no restrictions apply. Use ssl26.tar.gz.
(2) Inside the USA, non-commercial entities may install sslUSA26.tar.gz.
(3) Commercial entities in the USA are left in the cold, due to how the
licences work. (This is how the USA crypto export policy feels to the
rest of the world.)
If you did not install the ssl package yet, it is easily installed at any time
(see the afterboot(8) and ssl(8) manual pages).
You are STRONGLY urged to use ssh instead of telnet, rlogin, or rsh! ssh is
included in OpenBSD, and relies on the libssl26.tar.gz package, which
contains the patented RSA code. This package is available on all our FTP
servers, but NOT included on the CD. [MORE DETAILS NEEDED]
included in OpenBSD systems which have shared libraries (i386, sparc, mips,
m68k), and relies on the ssl26.tar.gz package, which contains the patented RSA
code. This package is available on all our FTP servers, but NOT included on
the CD. During the system install, this package was probably already installed
(use pkg_info(1) too see if ssl26 or sslUSA26 are installed).
Significant efforts were made to centralize all system configuration in the
/etc directory. You should be able to find each of the configuration files


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