wlanboy
Content Contributer
And don't forget to:Debian Wheezy has issued 2 fixes in the past 24 hours so if you updated it last night you need to do it again.![]()
- Recompile everything that depends on openssl
- Restart all services depending on openssl
And don't forget to:Debian Wheezy has issued 2 fixes in the past 24 hours so if you updated it last night you need to do it again.![]()
Related new announcement - http://seclists.org/bugtraq/2014/Apr/34Debian Wheezy has issued 2 fixes in the past 24 hours so if you updated it last night you need to do it again.
1.0.1e-2+deb7u5 <--last night's upgrade
1.0.1e-2+deb7u6 <--today's upgrade (today's upgrade will restart some services but not all so you'll still need to check with lsof or reboot)
It's been reissued but I am at work and little I can do for this right now. I shouldn't even be on vpsB right now.Looking like it's still waiting on the certificate to be reissued. Any idea on when that will be done?
Been quite useful I'll admit. Every time something gets stacked on the to-do list, keeping up with these things proves more difficult without assistance.
Fixed. Globalsign got a new middle cert.The new certificate is misconfigured so it throws error dialogs when you visit the site. It's supposed to be chained with an intermediate certificate that probably came with it in the email from the CA, but otherwise should be available on the CA website someplace.
Edit: it's fixed now. Some kind of CDN thing? It definitely didn't send the intermediate cert when I check in a few minutes ago, but it sends it now.
Date: 2014-04-11 17:22:21 GMT (1 day, 10 hours and 26 minutes ago)
Akamai Technologies is pleased to offer the following patch to OpenSSL. It adds a "secure arena" that is used to store RSA private keys. This arena is mmap'd, with guard pages before and after so pointer over- and under-runs won't wander into it. It's also locked into memory so it doesn't appear on disk, and when possible it's also kept out of core files. This patch is a variant of what we've been using to help protect customer keys for a decade.
This should really be considered more of a proof of concept than something that you want to put directly into production. It slides into the ASN1 code rather than adding a new API (OPENSSL_secure_allocate et al), the overall code isn't portable, and so on. If there is community interest, we would be happy to help work on addressing those issues. Let me restate that: *do not just take this patch and put it into production without careful review.*
OpenSSL is important to us, and this is the first of what we hope will be several significant contributions in the near future.
Thanks.
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Principal Security Engineer
Akamai Technology
Cambridge, MA