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11:00
@cavallo chdir?
-_-
@salathe Is the upper part of your head detached from the lower part? :P
system('cmd.exe /k START D:\\xampp\\htdocs\\mskstandalone\\file.bat');
What does the batch file do?
it will run a script
11:01
user image
3
obviously its important property - is that it's detached
because of start
why this dog is so popular these days?
@zerkms ?
any references on meme origins?
@zerkms wow such question great ask
5
@cavallo What kind of script? What does it do?
@PeeHaa :D
11:02
;)
/me goes to post that image to twitter to pretend he is in the mainstream of the memes
@PeeHaa i m running a python script from a bat
@cavallo Do you need the bat file in between?
I bet when @cavallo will marry - he will answer "I do" after 10 additional questions
boring. anyone to ask something silly?
11:10
Would you reject an offer from a place where you were not asked to write a single line of code during the interview?
nope
@PeeHaa yes i do
@cavallo cd \foo\bar && <your_command>?
@zerkms system('cmd.exe /k START cd /d E:_WorkArea && python makestandalone.py ')
it changes the direcotry
but does not call the py file
cd \foo\bar && <your_command>
where <your_command> is your command
not its part
11:18
@BenjaminGruenbaum best kind of
In my recent experience.
@BenjaminGruenbaum Not at all. I am at such a job ;)
Yay!
That's comforting to hear.
If I write code (not example code, e.g. test app), I want to get paid for it.
Why give them working real-life code?
Would you reject an offer from a place where you were not asked to write a single line of code during your further job?
:-D
11:21
It's called sex trafficking :P
0
Q: Title after content dynamic_sidebar

AnnieIs there a configuration to change the dynamic_sidebar widget's title order? I want to display title after the content. I used JavaScript to swap it at page load and looking for a robust -- tangible -- solution.

@zerkms Yes!
It's the only thing I'm good at I am not a total idiot it
Well that and yelling at people
I wanna know who got Shaq
Someone on the fontpage received a macbook air from their secret santa a few days ago
"If you understand int and vector you understand C++. The rest is 'details' (1,300+ pages of details)." LOL, I love how Bjarne puts it.
11:26
> ps: Sorry for the apple ipad on my wishlist, that was really awkward.
these days I think I would like a surface
Too bad Bill doesn't lurk in this chat @Fabien.
lol.
I like Bill Gates, he seems like good people.
@Jack Or each individual Yes vote needs 2/3 ;) That's subject to interpretation and that's why I like to avoid those votes ^^
@Fabien Probably the best people of those bad people ;)
11:29
> 10/10 would receive gift from Bill Gates again

ps: Sorry for the apple ipad on my wishlist, that was really awkward.
lolz
@webarto He's not that bad. Gives away crazy amounts of money.
ow @webarto was faster :(
Wondering how he got it? :)
@webarto how?
made the most popular OS?
Ok, I'm biased, but he's the best.
11:31
:P
I mean, maybe someone can't really afford the most popular OS and still wants to use computer.
Windows isn't that expensive anymore.
I'm thinking most of income came from corporations, so no harm done anyways.
Business licenses etc.
@Fabien He cured Malaria, seriously. That's huge..
@BenjaminGruenbaum Yup. I liked his quote regarding Google sending Wifi balloons to Africa too.
11:32
@Fabien Bill is the best people, he gave me all Windows software for free because I'm student.
FU APPLE
@webarto I really cannot afford some Bentley Continental but I still want to drive it. Seriously
Bentley is for posh and opulence showing, 'puters are for education.
There was no Malaria vaccination because it was "not-economic" so he just put a billion dollars in research and is distributing it for free. He is one of the biggest philanthropists and even more so - he spends a lot of his time convincing other wealthy people to give to charity.
Or if you really enjoy nice cars.
Holy shit #nzsecretsanta! http://twitpic.com/dp6e6n
oh, some secret santas really rock
11:34
Yes, but some suck too.
Ultimately it feels like they're awesome because the best ones get noticed.
Never heard about secret Santa phenomenon 'till today :D
I asked a few weeks ago if room 11 did a Secret Santa, no one answered.
That's huge IMO, he is known for scary business tactics and management (though there is no doubt about what he accomplished - popularizing the PC), but as a person - he is known for his generosity and modesty. Definitely one of the good guys in my book.
I have heard for it for 3 or 4 years but haven't participated (yet)
Me and my friends always do a secret santa, usually my workplace too.
11:36
I just realised that for some absurd reason android backups my data to a cloud service I know nothing of... :s
@BenjaminGruenbaum Same, same.
Related: microsoft.ba
> usually my workplace too.
There are 3 of us in the office. It would be weird lol
@iroegbu You know what's scary? Connect it to your pc using USB debugging and watch the console :)
A friend offered me dat Note 3 for half price, guess he's a sort of Santa too.
That's one expensive phone, like 700€ where I am.
11:38
Google Nexus FTW
@webarto Yeah but you woul dhave to have sex with him for that price. Not sure whether it's worth it (haven't seen the guy).
:D
Affordable and awesome.
@PeeHaa Ah, so that's the deal! I'm naive like a schoolgirl ^^
/me unplugs phone and turns off data service
11:41
:P
You also need to take out the sim and break the phone and spread the pieces all over the world
Like horcrux.
I'll be using Nokia 1200 next
@Danack err... you still didn't tell me what the problem is
0
Q: How to give my own ids to the container of High Chart in Yii

N0nh4x0r ツI'm using high-chart extension, but I don't know how to give ID to the container, now getting random id's like yw11,yw12 etc., How to give my own ids to the container like graph1, graph2 etc.,

I want to buy a game but the steam sale is supposed to start any day :(
11:51
@webarto osom much
@webarto Getting the hang of work yet?
@LeviMorrison "Release Notes" on start page neads moar alignment :)
> If you wish to become a PHP guru who understands the performance difference between echo and print and why you should implement a Singleton pattern for database access, don’t use a framework.
:D
@Fabien wha
I'm trying to find some unbiased intelligent good blogs/reviews on why you should or should not use a framework. Distinct lack of them available.
Anyhoo, that's a quote from the above linked one.
Every benchmark is framework vs framework.
11:57
does that page really suggest "symphony"? :D
hrhr
lol
also linking the ancient XSLT-based cms :D
For as much as every intelligent person in here tends to be against the idea of a multi-site framework, there's little counter-argument for people out there. It makes the popularity of frameworks unsurprising.
What's worse is coming across the opinion that frameworks are the future and not using them is 'bad' or dated.
This one guy lists "Job opportunities" as a pro of learning a framework.
@Fabien it's not that it's bad to not use them, but NIH
It's a sad day when we all start to learn to build brown houses.
NIH?
12:00
Not invented here (NIH) is the philosophy of social, corporate, or institutional cultures that avoid using or buying already existing products, research, standards, or knowledge because of their external origins and costs. The reasons for not wanting to use the work of others are varied, but can include fear through lack of understanding, an unwillingness to value the work of others, or forming part of a wider "turf war". As a social phenomenon, this philosophy manifests as an unwillingness to adopt an idea or product because it originates from another culture, a form of nationalism. Th...
Well I should clarify not 'bad' to use a framework. But it's not the best. A frameworks usage tends to be more about time than performance.
And by framework I mean the popular ones. Not one you build yourself for a specific site.
I'm wondering if there's actually any performance-critical website served by PHP...
requests are money
If you need performance, throw a frikken reverse proxy at it and you're done
@Ocramius ?
I'm sure a lot of the larger sites are interested in performance
12:03
@NikiC talking requests that go through to PHP all the time
Also, I don't think most people in here dislike frameworks because of the perf impact (though it might be a factor)
@NikiC ofc. What I'm saying is that there's way to achieve that even if you got thousands of gazillions of <whatever> to process
Yes, poor code choices/design is a big reason I imagine too.
It's likely more about them commonly being badly designed to the point of absolutely coupling your application code to the fw
@NikiC I just wish there were more results in google to highlight the opinion.
From an unbiased search.
12:06
well, coupling core logic to the fw is more like a mistake in general. That is a design problem, not a problem of using a fw
the popular frameworks tend to try and force you into design choices that are often not optimal. imo they shouldn't do anything beyond the presentation layer, yet many try to force AR etc on to the application
@Ocramius Often related to design decisions in the FW. I.e. the FW can make it very hard to write decoupled code.
and yes, unexperienced devs will always produce <yet-another-app-that-will-need-conversion-to-newer-architecture-someday>
@NikiC I'd say it's the wrong fw. I can actually grep for "Zend" in my service layer and I'm pretty sure that there'll be only ArrayUtil usages
@Ocramius Yeah, Zend and Symfony are likely okayish
wondering how many people still write huge-ass controllers :D
12:08
I don't really know them, so I can't opine on that
@Patrick oh, yep, persistence. I must say that I actually use the ORM directly there, and I don't see a way out of it (or an alternative)
so yeah, that's quite coupled :\
@igorw The composer issue says it better than I can - github.com/composer/composer/issues/1074 . But the short version is there's no security around "composer self-update" and it's open to man in the middle attacks.
Which is bad.
@Danack help finishing Sslurp :D
My overly simplified decision process
@Fabien and yep, wondering if you ever hit "Is performance an issue?"
12:12
lol
or is your website wired together with POST requests? :P
@Ocramius or does it have dynamic elements that need to be updated every second, and are not okay to be cached for five minutes?
@Ocramius As I mentioned above - tbh I'm not sure that "self-update" should be part of composer. It's not really an issue for me to download new versions of composer from the official website.
@NikiC push them to cache as soon as they're updated?
12:13
I'm over-simplifying ofc, but I'm basically avoiding the overhead problem by assuming it's an O(1)
@Danack interestingly, it's a synonymous :D
huge ass-controllers? ^^
lol!
@Fabien I would love to use a small presentation layer framework that gives me some routing, basic http security stuff and an OO interface for request stuff and output. Much more beyond that and it's just empty weight that I'll probably never use
@Patrick So create one. :)
12:16
@Patrick that sounds quite reasonable
@NikiC insert reference to yo momma, here
@Patrick silex?
slim?
Silex is always a nice option.
Everything else should just be a plugin I can optionally include
Silex is the option
I also wrote a fw to make a huge-ass framework look like silex
hiding zem complexity <_<
12:20
Basically I think my #1 concern is one day conducting an interview and asking someone if they can code 'x' and the response is "I can do that in foo framework".
Show me how to connect to a database? "Sure, let me install Symfony".
@Fabien You're interviewin people?
@Danack I have done in the past :P but no, not anymore.
@Fabien that is already true for many devs. Though $app['db'] = function () { return new \PDO('nsa://me'); }; would be enuff there I suppose
@Fabien I always let interviewees know they're not using any frameworks for interview questions. :P
I'm actually thinking that java devs don't know how to do that anymore
all I see is JDBC adapters :D
12:24
It's a shame.
@Suhosin nothing new there. Same at universities afaik
tbh I dont mind if they use industry standard libs
@Ocramius Really? The Java devs I used to work with were all 'HIBERNATE ALL THE THINGS'. Because who needs to actually use relational queries.
Like, we use boost here a lot, idc if interviewees use boost
@Danack I do that myself in PHP as well :P
12:27
Anyhoo, time to go get some injection from the hospital. Hopefully I will come back looking like Captain America.
bbl
I'm just wondering if they know how to use a raw connection
@Fabien huge-ass needle
\o/
oooooh
that's more work for me and evan \o/
12:30
@Ocramius Normal link please
$index = ($index < $min) ? $min : ($index > $max ? $max : $index);
gracias :)
I'm too used to gtkgrab
12:31
Aaaah that one. Yep seen it
OP fixed it
^ didn't wait with repwhoring for OP to clarify what it is he wants
@Ocramius I had a look at silex but I don't want doctrine etc silex.sensiolabs.org/documentation
user895378
@Danack lol fantastic
@Patrick I pasted how to use PDO above
user895378
morning
$app['db'] = function () { return new \PDO('nsa://me'); };
12:40
Mornin'
@rdlowrey An old 'un, but a good 'un.
@Ocramius I know how to use whatever I want, but I don't want doctrine sitting somewhere in my project folder just because it came with the framework
@Patrick: Agreed!
@Patrick it doesn't?
@Ocramius and I wrote a quick router myself for the current project and use the symfony http-thing component, but it's already annoying me with the flashbag stuff etc so I might just write my own too
12:42
did you just install it? OOTB there's no doctrine dep
@Patrick parameter bag?
@Ocramius I just had a look at their website
@Patrick look at the composer.json, not at the site >.<
/me extracts whip
@Patrick And use "composer update --no-dev" (or similar) to avoid installing it with doctrine.
or just composer install
I'll have a look at it for part 2 of this project (2 separate app required), but so far I don't really like what I am seeing with the symfony components
12:45
meh
@Patrick I use Silex but not Doctrine.
@Ocramius wow great code such perform
user895378
To those people here from the UK ... what sort of backward puritanical state do you live in that you have problems like this?
user895378
Quick! Filter the intarnets! Save the children!
@rdlowrey can't imagine internets without pr0n
:(
12:51
@rdlowrey The UK elected the conservatives into government again - you can't blame the Tories, it's just in their nature to fuck things up.
user895378
I don't know what's more backward: thinking it's a good idea to filter the internet or so thoroughly misunderstanding technology as to think you can actually succeed at something like that.
@Fabien not really, holiday season begins now, and they'll continue work on 6th of January :) I'm not liking per hour work, 'cause I'm used to getting paid while not doing much :) If I effectively work 8 hours that's probably 16 hours or more spent, that's not possible.
We'll see if it can work out, I'm having hard time understanding other people code and logic.
@rdlowrey I disagree with that premise. It's only through a huge series of coincidences that we have an 'open internet' at all. If the US + UK government had realised what it was actually going to be used for, and they had the attitude to 'security' that the current governments do, I don't think we ever would have had an open internet.
It would have been like:
user895378
@Danack Oh totally. If governments had any clue what the internet would become it never would've happened.
user895378
It's depressing to see the massive government land-grab over the last few years once they finally caught on.
user895378
12:54
Trying every possible way they can to control that shit.
also, the UK really only has 2 internet providers at the moment, BT and Virgin-NTL. It's really not that hard for the government to pressure them into blocking all the good stuff, as well as installing backdoors into every adsl-router bit-tech.net/news/hardware/2013/12/17/bt-back-door/1
user895378
That's depressing.
Yes.
And this is why things like tor, namecoin & opendns need to exist
user895378
IMO the big win was when secure encryption was allowed to be legal for civilian use.
13:00
Because governments are wankers.
user895378
I know that at least in the US they tried very hard to prevent public access to real encryption back in the day.
@rdlowrey I'd wish them good luck with trying to prevent it. Would probably go about as well as their crackdown on piracy has.
'No, sorry, you can't use a HTTPS session with your bank.'
HTTPS? Isn't that illegal?
user895378
Well they lost that battle so the obvious next step was to try force manufacturers and software vendors to install back doors ... which is why IMO you can never feel good about using things that aren't open source
The big win was easy publishing: cheap domain names, blogging platforms, geocities, angelfire.
Even open-source software isn't safe unless thoroughly & regularly audited.
user895378
13:03
Of course ...
user895378
I feel pretty good about something like OpenSSL
Outside of OpenBSD and Linux kernel team, little open source software is thoroughly audited.
user895378
Which makes it all the more suspicious when someone like Apple comes out and says they're going to phase out OpenSSL in favor of their new closed-source proprietary solution ...
@Danack it uses HTTPS if it's available...
Move the power away from people and back to corporations & government.
Proprietary software is a philosophical decision to take power away from people.
13:05
if PHP cannot get its shit together to provide proper SSL...
user895378
@igorw 5.6
At least with open source, if we fail to audit it, it's our fault for running it.
also, this issue is not specific to self-update at all
it also affects downloading packages
user895378
Full TLS1.1 and 1.2 support in 5.6 ... TBH no one should be doing anything with TLS stream encryption in PHP < 5.6
Good luck auditing Windows or OS X
13:07
but you're really pointing the finger in the wrong direction here.
@igorw But there's no check that the DNS hasn't been altered. "it also affects downloading packages" Well, that's disconcerting.
@rdlowrey saw that, kudos
@rdlowrey People want security but aren't willing to put in the effort to ensure that they keep it. It's the same in all areas of politics, people pick convenience over control.
@Danack the problem is inherent in PHP itself and partially in the design of DNS
@rdlowrey Now need backport to 5.4 :)
user895378
13:11
@NikiC well the biggest remaining issue (I was actually going to mail internals about it today) is that it still defaults to the SSLv23 handshake even in the 5.6 branch (for now). This is a necessity for broad-based compatibility. But almost all clients and servers are capable of at least TLSv1. I think we need to change the default to TLSv1, especially since with 5.6 we'll now be able to manually set the specific protocol via a context option at call time to take advantage of TLSv1.1/2
user895378
@NikiC It really shouldn't be difficult to do that ... Mike merged my PRs into 5.6 (except the one fixing the segfault with OpenSSLv1.0.1 which was merged into the 5.5) but AFAIK they should have no issues going into 5.4/5 as well
user895378
And likewise the ability to set the protocol version via the context at call time is why we can safely change the default to TLSv1.0 because users can specify the older SSL protocols inline if they need to do so.
@rdlowrey +1 on your email! :D
@igorw As I said before - I don't think 'self-update' should be part of composer. Downloading the newest version from the composer website via HTTPS isn't really a burden, and that would allow the certificate chain to at least be validated by the users browser.
+1 on easier voting @rdlowrey
So mush +1 for flowery
13:16
/at least until 'self-update' has a signed 'thing' verifying it.
user895378
@PeeHaa r-deflower-y (as in @Lusitanian's mother) is how I prefer to read it :)
BANINATION OCCURS!
Crap I can also not show you my support for the rfc, because the karma is utterly brOken :(
user895378
@Jack Yeah, I tried to be as nice as possible while still saying "that's a really bad reason for a no vote"
13:18
@rdlowrey It seems like a pretty good reason to me ;)
@rdlowrey Yeah, I was contemplating how I should reply to that as well.
not the part about the -, but the part about the assoc ^^
@NikiC It's a crap reason. Oh that ... also 'meh' on that actually.
@PeeHaa What, you can't vote?
I cannot log in
user895378
13:19
@NikiC oh, if someone just can't get behind the associativity that's a personal thing. I understand that. I just object to the -3^2 === 9 argument.
When I try to login I am redirected to wiki.php.net/rfc/tls-peer-verification?do=login and my emailaddres is sort of prefilled peehaa_php.net
Good morning
anyway, I'm still waiting for that 5! operator... :P
nvm stupid
user895378
My first thought was that -3^2 === -9 was unintuitive but with a little research I quickly discovered that I was an idiot.
13:20
:D
user895378
@ircmaxell morning
@NikiC Yes, me too =D
The moment I typed it I realized I am a fucking retard
@PeeHaa What, what? Got the same thing :D
I tried to login using mail instead of username :D
13:21
Ah, not full email.
Yeah, it's just the <user> part of yer email.
E_TOO_MUCH_SOCIAL_NETWORK logins
So, that means username supports dot and underscore.
Or not.
16:0, yay!
Gawd, everything that crypto guy writes comes out in a trolling way ... is it deliberate?
13:24
I'm starting to think that unicode is a good solution to a lot of syntactic sugar problems we have...
what crypto guy?
yeah
user895378
10⁰¹²³⁺⁴⁵⁶⁻⁷⁸⁹
@Jack I found that particular suggestion quite funny ^^
It is funny :D
13:25
@ircmaxell that "Tony Ferrari" guy :P
6
PHP needs moar Unicode.
@salathe sush
hi, @ircmaxell
@NikiC He's making a point, it's just an observation on writing style :)
@ircmaxell Hmm, Crypto Compress on ML.
13:26
@NikiC a) what's the state of play with wiki.php.net/rfc/argument_unpacking and b) if it did happen, would it be possible to do (and would there be any point in doing) $arr3 = [...$arr1, ...$arr2]; ?
@DaveRandom ...$arr1, ...$arr2 seems like undefined output?
why would it be undefined?
@Ocramius No, it's the same as array_merge($arr1, $arr2);
Only (I think) more readable
ah, I see
sorry, was thinking about function params
Well it's the same deal there, func(...$arr1, ...$arr2); is the same as call_user_func_array('func', array_merge($arr1, $arr2));
Oh I see what you mean, in terms of function declaration not call
13:31
@DaveRandom I don't plan on supporting that
you could create an array constructor function to do that: function newArray(...$args) { return $args; }
Talking of RFC's Gordon appears to be too busy to open wiki.php.net/rfc/automatic_property_initialization to a vote - is someone else going to step up to open the vote? cough cough @NikiC
@NikiC No worries. Are you still planning on 5.6 for what's there though?
$stmt = $db->prepare("SELECT `id`, `username` `pass`, `aalt` FROM `us` WHERE `username` = ? LIMIT 1"))
$stmt->execute();
$stmt->bind_result($id, $username, $pass, $aalt);

it says error
mysqli_stmt::bind_result(): Number of bind variables doesn't match number of fields in prepared statement
Why?
@DaveRandom yeah, I think so
13:39
@Nileshpatel Probably, the number of bind variables doesn't match number of fields in prepared statement.
cool. I want it NOW :-P
Also @rdlowrey how does the updated TLS peer verification impl work in terms of the Win package?
@Nileshpatel hint bind_param
@Danack four field in prepare and four field in bind
i am also using.
$stmt->bind_param('s', $username);
...
How do you guys handle deployment to a unix server? I develop locally but want to set up a prod and test environment on the server. Right now I am copying files which is obviously not a solution...
13:41
@Patrick jenkins?
OH: "I don't advertise jobs on stackoverflow because it's visited mostly by people who don't have the answers"
@Patrick Some form of version control system (bzr, git, svn) with (optional) some form of continuous integration like Jenkins.
user895378
@DaveRandom openssl is compiled with default CA file and directory paths -- OSs and distros are in charge of specifying these at build time. I've been able to test with several linux distros and MacOS and things "just work" because the distro-distributed openssl binary is built with knowledge of where these files live.
We use development (local box), staging (test server) and production (live server)
user895378
But I don't have the first clue how to compile php on windows.
13:45
@rdlowrey Compiling anything on Windows is a bastard.
But mingw is probably your best bet
@rdlowrey Not for us mortals.
user924016
hi =]
user895378
@DaveRandom As long as the openssl is installed on the windows system used to build php (and not manually compiled) it should be no different for win.
@rdlowrey The WinAPI provides a whole bunch of cert service functions. I suspect they are fundamentally incompatible with the consumption of OpenSSL though (i.e. OpenSSL itself would have to hook into these functions rather than trying to bolt them on after the fact at the PHP level) although I'm not 100% on that. Regardless, the issue still remains that the Win distributions are not going to work without a CA file (since Win doesn't actually have one).
13:48
@rdlowrey Ahh, but it works differently on Win. You don't have to compile OpenSSL in in order for the SSL stuff to work, you just need a DLL
Actually, let me double check that assertion
user895378
I'm fairly certain it will "just work" because the paths will always be the same on any given windows install. The DLL should be built with these in mind.
user895378
Regardless, php distributing a CA file of its own is a terrible idea. I wouldn't propose that option again. Ever.
@rdlowrey Paths to what though? Win doesn't use a file with a bunch of PEM certs in it like *nix, it has its own craxy mofo storage mechanism that mere mortals have no hopes of understanding (which is, I presume, why Mozilla use there own cert store instead of hooking into the WinAPI)
user895378
@DaveRandom Neither does Mac. In fact MacOSx uses PKCS12 certs. It's about what's compiled in the openssl binary.
user895378
In any case, someone capable of building these things on windows will have to test it there because I'm incapable.
13:53
@Suhosin using git already, will have a look at jenkins
@rdlowrey OK fair enough, If you think it will work then I'll trust your judgement, although I must say I'd rather someone actually tested it before it was pulled into trunk, can we get Pierre to build it to check?
user895378
@DaveRandom Yes, I'll ask. Regardless, the current solution is the correct one. As long as OpenSSL is installed correctly on the windows machine where the PHP binary is built with openssl support it will just work.
Joe
Joe
Hello to everyone and the 600 other Joes on SE
@rdlowrey Oh I'm not arguing for a second that this is not the correct solution, only suggesting that the Win build team might need to maintain their own CA file. At the end of the day, Windows support is a secondary concern.
13:57
@Joe 2000000+ users and only 600 of them are called Joe? :-S
36 * 173 is... much more than 600 :P
6228 Joes on SO. :D
Joe
Joe
Okay I should have specified 600 other Joes on SE chat
user895378
@DaveRandom Yeah. I really don't think there's any need for the maintenance of the CA file. Basically OpenSSL stopped distributing CA Files a while ago with their source. So OSs and distros have been tasked with providing their own now for a while. So I can only assume that when you install openssl on windows with the .msi or whatever windows calls these things that's part of the deal -- you get a CA file and associated hash directory with the install. But you're right, it should be tested.

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