Hi everyone, I apologize for Comic Sans. And honestly I didn't know using it implies this many impressions. As I said my other subscription named "Ananthaneni Saiteja Chowdary" is my outlook account that i use for my office work(because I am using a QHD resolution my fonts are so small so i selected the font that looks good for me to read.) I actually posted two questions one from this email and other from outlook account. This question was actually posted through my outlook account in the beginning, and just as a followup and to include some more information in my question I thought of asking the question again. So I copied the contents of my previous mail and added few more info at the end in my Mail app, unfortunately the font got changed to comic sans. Its not that i knowingly changed the font to impress or insult. I am a non native English speaker and I sometimes don't understand the exact emotion or feeling in non-technical conversation.
I am using OpenSSL client to create a custom TLS client which can send or manipulate the default TLS handshake messages so that i can test for any bugs in our TLS server implementation. I spent about 4 months in reading OpenSSL code and making changes and adding new arguments to modify the default client. So in that process i came across the WPACKET API. For framing SSL records I had to use it. I will post the question again in a new thread. Please take a look at it and help me out. Regards Saiteja. On Sat, Dec 30, 2017 at 12:17 AM, Viktor Dukhovni < openssl-us...@dukhovni.org> wrote: > > > > On Dec 29, 2017, at 1:34 PM, Michael Wojcik < > michael.woj...@microfocus.com> wrote: > > > > That said, I suspect the larger reason why Saiteja has not had a > technical response to the original query is that few people on > openssl-users have experience with using the WPACKET API and other > low-level operations in the 1.1 codebase. It still might be worth reposting > without the controversial styling. > > More importantly, what problem is the OP really trying to solve? > > The WPACKET interface is an internal interface that does not > appear in any public OpenSSL headers. It is undocumented and > subject to change without notice. The OP should not be using > this interface, except as part of a code contribution to improve > the implementation of TLS in the OpenSSL library. > > -- > Viktor. > > -- > openssl-users mailing list > To unsubscribe: https://mta.openssl.org/mailman/listinfo/openssl-users >
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