18%
15.04.2013
be no question of disabling the legacy algorithm for the time being. However, disabling MD5 signatures is something that you can (and should) do today.
You can enable TLS 1.2 – given OpenSSL 1.0.1 and a recent 2.2
18%
03.04.2024
supports the usual suspects, 64-bit ARM and x86_64 processors, and the distribution is even said to run on the s390x. Like most Kubernetes distributions, K3s uses CRI-O as its container engine. Thanks to 64
18%
30.11.2025
:
09 Content-Type: application/sdp
10 Content-Length: 142
11
12 v=0
13 o=alice 53655765 2353687637 IN IP4 pc33.atlanta.com
14 s=-
15 t=0 0
16 c=IN IP4 pc33.atlanta.com
17
18%
30.11.2025
.0
2.2.x.
2.6.30 through 2.6.35
Debian 6 (Squeeze)
2.3.x.
2.6.36 through 3.0
Ubuntu 11.10
2.4.x.
3.1.
openSUSE 12.1
2.5.x.
3
18%
09.10.2017
"SubnetMax": "10.99.0.0",
07 "Backend": {
08 "Type": "udp",
09 "Port": 7890
10 }
11 }
12 [...]
At first glance, this concept looks robust and simple
18%
18.07.2013
in TLSv1.0 was error-prone, but the problems long remained theoretical.
TLSv1.1, which was designed to iron out the worst weaknesses of CBC, followed in 2006. Two years later, TLSv1.2 was released
18%
16.10.2012
6), and start stream blocking (line 7), which executes the command and waits for the response. Now, write the output to a variable (lines 9-12), close the stream (line 14), and send the response
18%
17.06.2017
04 real :: var2
05 integer :: int1
06 end type other_struct
07
08 type my_struct ! Declaration of a Derived Type
09 integer :: i
10 real :: r
11 real*8 :: r8
12 real, dimension(100
18%
25.09.2023
.getenv("REDIS_HOST", "localhost")
07 r = redis.Redis(host=redis_host, port=6379, decode_responses=True)
08
09 @app.route('/')
10 def hello():
11 count = r.incr('counter')
12 return f'Hello, you have visited {count} times.'
13
18%
12.09.2013
. There are some new lines: 5 and 12 to 22. Line 22 installs the sig function as a signal handler for SIGTERM. When the signal arrives, line 13 opens a new connection to the database and calls the pg