On 02/27/11 1:50 AM, erikmccaskey64 wrote:
Main question: is it safe, to open a port for an openssl server?
e.g.:
server side - generate a self-signed cert. time openssl req -x509 -nodes -days 365 -newkey rsa:8192 -keyout mycert.pem -out mycert.pem openssl s_server -accept 52310 -cert mycert.pem
Is it secure? - it could be DOSed' [DenialofService] or could it be attacked in any way?
Are there any iptables rule for restricting connections to dyndns names?
e.g.: only allow connection from "asdfasdf.dyndns.com" and "asdfasdf2.dyndns.com" and "asdfasdf3.dyndns.com"?
any host names used in iptables rules are looked up at the time the rule is created, and if the hostname->IP later changed, the iptables would not be aware of this until the next time they are reloaded.
How could i restrict the openssl server to only accept traffic from given clients? Please help me "think"..
Or are there any "production ready" methods, that can do authentication too? [+using ssl]. "openssl s_server" and "openssl s_client" would be perfect, but the problem is it doesn't has username/password auth :\
aren't those openssl s_server and s_client intended just for testing protocols? If you want to secure an application, you implement ssl in your application via libssl, or you use a vpn tunnel such as openvpn (which uses SSL itself)
anyways, the whole idea of SSL is to use certificate based authentication rather than username/password.