freebsd-ports/www/apache13-modssl/pkg-descr
Patrick Li e33ef66d65 - Update to 1.3.26+2.8.10
- Use MASTER_SITES grouping
2002-06-26 17:17:32 +00:00

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This is Apache version 1.3 plus mod_ssl which provides strong cryptography
via the Secure Sockets Layer (SSL v2/v3) and Transport Layer Security (TLS
v1) protocols by the help of the SSL/TLS implementation toolkit OpenSSL which
is based on SSLeay from Eric A. Young and Tim J. Hudson. The mod_ssl package
was created in April 1998 by Ralf S. Engelschall and was originally derived
from software developed by Ben Laurie for use in the Apache-SSL HTTP server
project.
As a summary, here are its main SSL/TLS-related features:
o Open-Source software (BSD-style license)
o Useable for both commercial and non-commercial use
o Available for both Unix and Win32 (Windows 95/98/NT) platforms
o 128-bit strong cryptography world-wide
o Support for SSLv2, SSLv3 and TLSv1 protocols
o Support for both RSA and Diffie-Hellman ciphers
o Clean reviewable ANSI C source code
o Clean Apache module architecture
o Integrates seamlessly into Apache through an Extended API (EAPI)
o Full Dynamic Shared Object (DSO) support
o Advanced pass-phrase handling for private keys
o X.509 certificate based authentication for both client and server
o X.509 certificate revocation list (CRL) support
o Support for per-URL renegotiation of SSL handshake parameters
o Support for explicit seeding of the PRNG from external sources
o Additional boolean-expression based access control facility
o Backward compatibility to other Apache SSL solutions
o Inter-process SSL session cache (DBM and Shared Memory based)
o Powerful dedicated SSL engine logging facility
o Simple and robust application to Apache source trees
o Fully integrated into the Apache 1.3 configuration mechanism
o Additional integration into the Apache Autoconf-style Interface (APACI)
o Assistance in X.509v3 certificate generation (both RSA and DSA)
o Experimental support for external Crypto Devices (OpenSSL ENGINE)
WWW: http://www.apache.org/
WWW: http://www.modssl.org/
WWW: http://www.openssl.org/