SSLContext-Kickstart
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SSLContext-Kickstart | Simple Java Mail | |
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11 | 2 | |
462 | 1,168 | |
- | - | |
9.3 | 8.7 | |
1 day ago | 3 days ago | |
Java | Java | |
Apache License 2.0 | Apache License 2.0 |
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SSLContext-Kickstart
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Whats your opinion regarding a library name change and package name change
My library is currently named SSLContext Kickstart see here on github: https://github.com/Hakky54/sslcontext-kickstart, which is inspired from graphql-kickstart of spring and my library provided during the initial development just a helper method to easily create a sslcontext and therefor I thought sslcontext-kickstart would make sense as it provides an easy to use helper method to give you a kickstart when configuring your client or server with ssl. However that part is not that relevant anymore as it provides much more utilities like live reloading ssl and much more. The current name is just aweful to be honest. I have the following artifacts being generated:
Thank you u/darri I am glad to hear you are also ok with the name. And regarding the support for modules I created an issue so you can keep track of the changes: https://github.com/Hakky54/sslcontext-kickstart/issues/332 This will be indeed a major version.
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Certificate Ripper v2 released - tool to extract server certificates
Yess, but this tool is a CLI app made from java. If you want to do it within your own java application, you can import the following library: GitHub - sslcontext-kickstart. Here is the documentation for extracting the certificates programatically: https://github.com/Hakky54/sslcontext-kickstart#extracting-server-certificates
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Hot reload SSL configuration for a server and http client
Hi, I have been working on a small library to make hot reloading of a ssl configuration for a server and http client possible. I was just curious why we needed to restart the server or recreate a http client with new ssl configuration when the keystores needed to be updated. I wanted to learn how the ssl configuration is handled in java and was just curious if I could be able to bypass this limitation and reload the ssl configuration instantly. An alternative would be to use nginx as a proxy with ssl configuration for a server setup, but I was a bit bored and wanted to achieve this just in java. In the above demo I demonstrate a spring boot with embedded jetty server, however similar behaviour is possible with akka or other servers which use SSLContext, SSLSocketFactory, SSLEngine, TrustManager or KeyManager. The server has an initial ssl configuration and it will get updated by an admin application from the terminal through an https request, but it can also use a file listener to update it. If the keystores on the filesystem get replaced or updated it can also pick that up or fetch it from a database based on a trigger or something else. The demo can be found here https://github.com/Hakky54/java-tutorials/tree/main/instant-server-ssl-reloading I use my own library to have this setup working, which is available here: https://github.com/Hakky54/sslcontext-kickstart
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Updating server certificates during runtime without the need of restarting it
It uses my own library: GitHub - SSLContext Kickstart
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SSLContext Kickstart 6.6.0 Released
Ah, yes that is a nice way to get the root certificate. But it looks like this method will only work when the server is also including the root ca right? Maybe I am overseeing something. I just found a different method, see here for a WIP implementation: https://github.com/Hakky54/sslcontext-kickstart/pull/83/files Maybe you can share your opinion regarding this solution?
Simple Java Mail
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Version 1.5.0 of the email address validation library, JMail, is now available
Oh, this is the validation engine in https://www.simplejavamail.org/ which I like very much! Thank you!
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