Hi. On Sat, 4 Apr 2015 12:37:56 +1300 Chris Bannister <cbannis...@slingshot.co.nz> wrote:
> > Come on guys, what's so difficult about trimming your posts. > > On Fri, Apr 03, 2015 at 08:22:11PM +0300, Reco wrote: > > If it does not help - download the page with wget or curl (last one is > > preferrable for this) > > What can curl do that wget can't do? $ apt-get show wget | grep Dep Depends: libc6 (>= 2.11), libgcrypt11 (>= 1.4.5), libgnutls26 (>= 2.12.17-0), libgpg-error0 (>= 1.10), libidn11 (>= 1.13), zlib1g (>= 1:1.1.4), dpkg (>= 1.15.4) | install-info $ apt-get show curl | grep Dep Depends: libc6 (>= 2.7), libcurl3 (= 7.26.0-1+wheezy12), zlib1g (>= 1:1.1.4) $ apt-cache show libcurl3 | grep Dep Depends: libc6 (>= 2.11), libgssapi-krb5-2 (>= 1.10+dfsg~), libidn11 (>= 1.13), libldap-2.4-2 (>= 2.4.7), librtmp0 (>= 2.3), libssh2-1 (>= 1.2.6), libssl1.0.0 (>= 1.0.1), zlib1g (>= 1:1.1.4) Pre-Depends: multiarch-support It boils down to the fact that wget is linked against gnults and curl is linked against openssl. Nothing that rebuild of a package can't change, of course :) And openssl is more tolerable to: 1) Self-signed certificates. 2) Mixed support of SSL3.0 and TLS1.0. 3) Disabled SSL3.0 and enabled TLS1.0 only. Of those, only 3) somewhat applies to https://www.debian.org, but people these days have really strange ideas of configuring TLS. Especially if said people are allowed to configure web-servers. So, in the case of doubt - you use curl or rebuild wget against openssl. It's that simple. Reco -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-user-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org Archive: https://lists.debian.org/20150404025124.93f67e2f933a1fd0fb8f4...@gmail.com