bearssl

Smaller SSL/TLS

BearSSL is an implementation of the SSL/TLS protocol (RFC 5246) written in C. It aims at offering the following features: * Be correct and secure. In particular, insecure protocol versions and choices of algorithms are not supported, by design; cryptographic algorithm implementations are constant-time by default. * Be small, both in RAM and code footprint. For instance, a minimal server implementation may fit in about 20 kilobytes of compiled code and 25 kilobytes of RAM. * Be highly portable. BearSSL targets not only “big” operating systems like Linux and Windows, but also small embedded systems and even special contexts like bootstrap code. * Be feature-rich and extensible. SSL/TLS has many defined cipher suites and extensions; BearSSL should implement most of them, and allow extra algorithm implementations to be added afterwards, possibly from third parties.

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Distributions

openSUSE Tumbleweed

security Experimental
0.6

openSUSE Leap 15.5

security Experimental
0.6

openSUSE Leap 15.4

SUSE SLE-15-SP2

security Experimental
0.6

SUSE SLE-15-SP1

security Experimental
0.6

SUSE SLE-12-SP5

security Experimental
0.6

Unsupported distributions

The following distributions are not officially supported. Use these packages at your own risk.

SUSE:SLE-12:SLE-Module-Adv-Systems-Management

SUSE:SLE-15:GA