--- The Forwarded Message Follows ---
attached mail follows:
On Wed, 15 Jan 2003 11:22:02 -0500
Colin Viebrock <colin@easydns.com> wrote:
>>> And *COMPLET* mean just that!
>>>
>>> 1) Present the message being made of the server, and
>>>provide it as a
>>> text file
>
>These are provided in the API spec.
If *COMPLETE* examples are really provided than why have
so many emails I've receive agreed with my position?
The API docs *ARE* wanting, and it is debatable as to what
should be done to fix them up.
>>> 2) Show all messages used for any interlocks, and
>>>provide as a text file
>
>I don't know what you mean by this.
Sorry, I was refering to examplifying all the required
"layers", and clearly teasing out each layer and show how
the layers depend on each other.
>>> 3) Provide the packets after encryption as files. Thus I
>>>have a an
>>> incremental baseline from which I can verify my code.
>
>You want a TCP dump of the encrypted data? That is
>simply absurd.
You are paraniod. ;-)
What's absurbed about providing a completely detailed
baseline?
>First, the paranoid among us will think you are going to
>try and
>reverse-hack our encryption keys. Second, if you
>honestly claim to be
>able to understand Blowfish encrypted TCP packets, but
>can't understand
>the OpenSRS API specifications ... well ...
I don't recall *EVER* requesting or expecting a Tucows
reseller provide me this information.
I do request and expect that *TUCOWS* provide *ALL OF US*
this information for a "throw-away key" that is dedicated
to the detailed documenation.
>I for one don't buy it.
You are obviously far more inteligent than I am .....
>I'm sending to you, not cc'ing the list, the XML dump of
>a domain lookup
>(generated using the PHP class, but that's irrelevant).
> That, plus some
>reading of the API specs, should be more than enough for
>you to get
>started ... especially if you've been "programming micro
>compunters
>since [you] purchased a
>TRS-80 back in 1976".
Thanks! A really do appreciate it!
This archive was generated by hypermail 2.1.3 : Tue Oct 19 2004 - 23:37:33 EDT