Hello World! (In particular, that part of it ouside the USA and Canada) I have (with official sanction of the organisation concerned) a LEGAL site for the distribution of crypt and Kerberos code. The secure code (crypt) is _identical_ to the US code. It originated in South Africa and Australia, and has never been to the US, so it is totally kosher. The Kerberos (eBones actually) code stared out life like the secure stuff, but as the US code was worked on, the changes were tracked with code legally available outside the US, so that too is kosher. There are minor differences between the US and the "foreign" eBones, but it is ALL in comments and whitespace, so the compiled code should be the same barring CVS-type strings. The site is skeleton.mikom.csir.co.za in the directory ~ftp/pub/FreeBSD, and this site is running wu-ftpd, so to get a whole directory you _should_ be able to type get <dir>.tar or <dir>.tar.gz for compression. I have (at the the moment) 4 directories each containing crypto code for a different version of FreeBSD: ~ftp/pub/FreeBSD/1.1-RELEASE ~ftp/pub/FreeBSD/1.1.5.1-RELEASE ~ftp/pub/FreeBSD/2.0-RELEASE ~ftp/pub/FreeBSD/2.0.5-ALPHA Each directory contains two subdirectories - src and distfiles. `src' has all the source unpacked an in the individual files for those who need just a piece. `distfiles' contains the distribution tarballs that you would need for your installation process. Many thanks to the kind folks at the CSIR's Program for Network Design and Security. My email address is live (not dialup) but I do not generally read it during working hours. (My timezone is 2 hours ahead of GMT, and I work on average from 8:30am till 6:30pm Mon-Fri local time) My heart is in this project, and I WILL make it work. Work with me! Enjoy! Mark Murray <mark@grondar.za> -- Mark Murray 46 Harvey Rd, Claremont, Cape Town 7700, South Africa +27 21 61-3768 GMT+0200
On Sun, 4 Jun 1995, Mark Murray wrote:> The secure code (crypt) is _identical_ to the US code. It originated in > South Africa and Australia, and has never been to the US, so it is totally > kosher. The Kerberos (eBones actually) code stared out life like the secureJust in case you guys are interested, I'm the person who originally did the eBones stuff many years ago. I have been doing some more crypto stuff recently but I have only announced it on the ssl-list mailing list, newsgroups anouncements will occur in a week or 2. Anomgst the things. libdes - the des library that came with eBones has had a life of it's own and has been updated quite a bit. It has tripple des, ofb, cfb modes etc now and a few bug fixes. It is now released as part of my SSL implementation. This implementation contains DES, RC4, RSA (full private key generation function etc, infact about half the library is X509/RSA stuff). X509 routines. SSL. There are programs for handling X509 stuff and demo programs for ssl client and server implementation. A friend of mine (Tim Hudson tjh@mincom.oz.au) has put this into SRA telnet/telnetd, Mosaic and httpd (for https). This code has been tested and runs on all unix boxes I could get hold of. The SRA telnet has only been tested on Solaris 2.x and IRIX 5.x. The applications are still being worked on. This code is officially Alpha, in that I'm still working on the library quite a bit but it works and is available for ftp from ftp.psy.uq.oz.au /pub/Crypto/SSL and /pub/Crypto/SSLapps. There is a web page at http://www.psy.uq.oz.au/~ftp/Crypto (I think). The only problem is this machine blew it's root disk and will not be back until monday :-(. Currently SSLeay is not compatable with SSLref from netscape at a call level but it definitly is at a protocol level. In the next week or 2 I'll probably be working on making an interface to my RSA code compatable with RSAref. This code is now all under a licence which makes all of the above free for comercial and non-comercial use, with the restriction that I'm given attribution. Basically the same as the BSD licence. If people are interested in testing and putting SSL into apps under free BSD, feel free to start using the code. Documentation is somewhat lacking but I'll be working on that, you will just have to read the demo programs :-) have fun (on monday when psych is fixed) eric -- Eric Young | And Jesus said unto the masses AARNet: eay@mincom.oz.au |'Go and get a life of your own.'
Hello World! (In particular, that part of it ouside the USA and Canada) I have (with official sanction of the organisation concerned) a LEGAL site for the distribution of DES, crypt and Kerberos code. The secure code (crypt) is _identical_ to the US code. It originated in South Africa and Australia, and has never been to the US, so it is totally kosher. The Kerberos (eBones actually) code stared out life like the secure stuff, but as the US code was worked on, the changes were tracked with code legally available outside the US, so that too is kosher. There are minor differences between the US and the "foreign" eBones, but it is ALL in comments and whitespace, so the compiled code should be the same barring CVS-type strings. The site is skeleton.mikom.csir.co.za (and mirrors mentioned in the distributions) in the directory ~ftp/pub/FreeBSD, and this site is running wu-ftpd, so to get a whole directory you _should_ be able to type get <dir>.tar or <dir>.tar.gz for compression. I have (at the the moment) 4 directories each containing crypto code for a different version of FreeBSD: ~ftp/pub/FreeBSD/1.1-RELEASE ~ftp/pub/FreeBSD/1.1.5.1-RELEASE ~ftp/pub/FreeBSD/2.0-RELEASE ~ftp/pub/FreeBSD/2.0.5-RELEASE Each directory contains two subdirectories - src and distfiles. `src' has all the source unpacked and in the individual files for those who need just a piece. `distfiles' contains the distribution tarballs that you would need for your installation process. Many thanks to the kind folks at the CSIR's Program for Network Design and Security. My email address is live (not dialup) but I do not generally read it during working hours. (My timezone is 2 hours ahead of GMT, and I work on average from 8:30am till 6:30pm Mon-Fri local time). Enjoy! Mark Murray <mark@grondar.za> -- Mark Murray 46 Harvey Rd, Claremont, Cape Town 7700, South Africa +27 21 61-3768 GMT+0200