This is by the kind permission of Dave Safford, formerly of TAMU who wrote the
original code. Here is an excerpt of the e-mail exchange concerning this
issue:
Dave Safford wrote:
>Nick Sayer wrote:
>> Some time ago we spoke about SRA and importing it into FreeBSD. I forgot to
>> ask if you had a prefered license boilerplate for the top of the files. It
>> has come up recently, and the SRA code in FreeBSD doesn't have one.
>I really have no preference - use whatever is most convenient in the
>FreeBSD environment.
>dave safford
This is the standard BSD license with clause 3 removed and clause 4
suitably renumbered.
MFC after: 1 day
git-svn-id: http://svn0.us-east.freebsd.org/base/head/contrib/telnet@85690 ccf9f872-aa2e-dd11-9fc8-001c23d0bc1f
(512) are a little distressing, but the method really needs to be
extended to allow server-supplied DH parameters anyway.
Submitted by: kris
git-svn-id: http://svn0.us-east.freebsd.org/base/head/contrib/telnet@76690 ccf9f872-aa2e-dd11-9fc8-001c23d0bc1f
SRA does a Diffie-Hellmen exchange and then DES-encrypts the
authentication data. If the authentication is successful, it also
sets up a session key for DES encryption.
SRA was originally developed at Texas A&M University.
This code is probably export restricted (despite the fact that I
originally found it at a University in Germany).
SRA is not perfect. It is vulnerable to monkey-in-the-middle attacks
and does not use tremendously large DH constants (and thus an individual
exchange probably could be factored in a few days on modern CPU
horsepower). It does not, however, require any changes in user or
administrative behavior and foils session hijacking and sniffing.
The goal of this commit is that telnet and telnetd end up in the DES
distribution and that therefore an encrypted session telnet becomes
standard issue for FreeBSD.
git-svn-id: http://svn0.us-east.freebsd.org/base/head/contrib/telnet@49887 ccf9f872-aa2e-dd11-9fc8-001c23d0bc1f