Re: Debian readline/libedit breakage
От | Stephen Frost |
---|---|
Тема | Re: Debian readline/libedit breakage |
Дата | |
Msg-id | 20110211181327.GS4116@tamriel.snowman.net обсуждение исходный текст |
Ответ на | Re: Debian readline/libedit breakage (Greg Smith <greg@2ndquadrant.com>) |
Ответы |
Re: Debian readline/libedit breakage
Re: Debian readline/libedit breakage Re: Debian readline/libedit breakage |
Список | pgsql-hackers |
* Greg Smith (greg@2ndquadrant.com) wrote: > -GNU libreadine is certainly never going to add an OpenSSL exemption I really wish they would, that's just them being obnoxious- it's already LGPL, after all.. > -If the OpenSSL project was going to switch to a reasonable license, > they'd have done it years ago aiui, the problem here is actually a former OpenSSL hacker who has no interest (and, in fact, a positive interest against) in changing the OpenSSL licensing. Most of the current OpenSSL hackers don't have an issue with the change (again, aiui). > -There are many known and serious bugs/limitations in libedit > relative to libreadline Yes, which makes it suck. :( > -Adding GnuTLS support to PostgreSQL would require solving several > code quality issues I'm curious about this, but I don't know that I've got time to dive into it and solve it. :/ > Idealogically, I find the worst offendor here to be the OpenSSL > license. From a license purity perspective I'd like to see their > ridiculous requirements bypassed altogether by doing whatever is > necessary to get GnuTLS support working. But pragmatically, fixing > the bugs and adding features to libedit may be the easier route > here. That suprises me.. There are a ton of tools which work with GnuTLS today, and hearing that it's got serious issues isn't good. :/ Thanks, Stephen
В списке pgsql-hackers по дате отправления: