Marco d'Itri <m...@linux.it> wrote: > On Aug 09, Sven Hartge <s...@svenhartge.de> wrote:
>> Looking at https://developer.android.com/about/dashboards/index.html >> there is still a marketshare of ~25% of smartphones based on Android >> 5.0 and 5.1 and 16% based on 4.4. So this change would (at the >> moment) block ~40% of Android smartphones from connecting to any WLAN >> using PEAP or TTLS. > Android 5.x should support TLS 1.2: > http://caniuse.com/#search=TLS The Browser, yes. But not the components doing the WPA stuff: ,---- | Aug 9 20:09:13 ds9 radiusd[4179992]: (12924) Login incorrect (eap_ttls: TLS Alert write:fatal:protocol version): [owehxperia] (from client ap01 port 54 cli 30-39-26-xx-xx-xx) | Aug 9 20:09:24 ds9 radiusd[4179992]: (12928) eap_ttls: ERROR: TLS Alert write:fatal:protocol version | Aug 9 20:09:24 ds9 radiusd[4179992]: tls: TLS_accept: Error in error `---- Only recompiling openssl with TLS1.0 and TLS1.1 enabled allowed my phone to connect successfully. > but I see on your link that Android pre-5.x still has a ~25% market > share, so unless it will drop a lot in the next year I do not think that > we can cut them off from Debian-based web servers. It is far more than 25%. Lollipop, Kitkat and Jelly Bean add up to ~52% of marketshare and I don't think this number will drop significantly below 25% in the next 2 to 3 years. Grüße, Sven. -- Sigmentation fault. Core dumped.