I hereby claim:
- I am olemd on github.
- I am olemd (https://keybase.io/olemd) on keybase.
- I have a public key ASAJVbltf0TBwUZh0wQeQWr-hJD7M3INuJivbYlWa0L2rQo
To claim this, I am signing this object:
diff --git a/ext/openssl/extconf.rb b/ext/openssl/extconf.rb | |
index f4afb86..3e1bd40 100644 | |
--- a/ext/openssl/extconf.rb | |
+++ b/ext/openssl/extconf.rb | |
@@ -103,6 +103,9 @@ have_func("OPENSSL_cleanse") | |
have_func("SSLv2_method") | |
have_func("SSLv2_server_method") | |
have_func("SSLv2_client_method") | |
+have_func("SSLv3_method") | |
+have_func("SSLv3_server_method") |
I hereby claim:
To claim this, I am signing this object:
SUBSYSTEM=="tty", ATTRS{serial}=="A60008418C10", SYMLINK+="buspirate" |
IPv6 is great, but sometimes it's troublesome. SMTP over IPv6 is particularly troublesome if you're talking to Google (and probably others as well)
If you for some reason don't have a correct PTR record, you'll end up with a lots of refused mail and logs pointing you to https://support.google.com/mail/answer/81126?p=ipv6_authentication_error&rd=1#authentication
One way to fix this is to fall back to IPv4 only for outgoing SMTP. Given a Debian installation with split-config exim, the simplest way to do this seems to be as follows:
change :