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00:22
Also, Jesus Christ... it's taken us almost TEN YEARS to get return types after having agreed to them in TWO THOUSAND AND FIVE?!
w3c, mozilla & co. took about two decades to standardize flexbox. it's considered a new CSS3 technology now, funnily
@AndreaFaulds can you link to your arguments against the default __construct()?
@Ocramius Essentially, you shouldn't blindly call parent::__construct
Ah, I see
Yeah, I disagree with that, but I get the PoV there
00:40
ah, good reminder to vote "no" on that
@DaveRandom github.com/amphp/cache should probably not be dns specific (type and addr instead of value)
Sorry for that multi-ping. ^^
@kelunik Indeed, it's not had a lot of work done on it, as it stands it's basically as it was when it was extracted from amphp/dns
The plan would be for it to be a simple key-value store probably
I'd actually forgotten I even did that
probably because it is of pretty limited usefulness
@DaveRandom why is it?
00:54
At least we have amphp/redis now, so we could make the redis cache async, but we'll need some more implementations for the other options.
Because at the moment all the back ends are synchronous
@DaveRandom at the moment, yeah ;-)
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wee, I won a poker game tonight. buy in 200 NOK 1st rpize 700 NOK
and I was one of 2 who drank
user924016
Congrats
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01:01
thanks :)
@rdlowrey I'm struggling to decipher the conflicting info from around the internet and you may already know: I'm about to set up a root/intermediate CA for internal use at the office, if there anything I need to do at the point of issuing the CA certs if I want to potentially support OCSP at some point down the line?
It's conceivable I will end up revoking certs quite a bit in future, as I may end up using it to sign client certs on a per-employee basis for a company with >100 staff, so there is a high enough staff turnover to worry about it
also: configurable OCSP stapling for stream servers would be a cool feature for 7
#ThingsThatNobodyHasTimeFor
Hello.
Gah, I'm so friggin' sick of the "how dare you dislike something that I like" mentality of people on the internet. Please smack me upside the head if you see me heading toward meta.
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I never really got the memo about pics with text being better then text
@OIS Short version, humans don't process 'facts' they process stories....and pictures can tell a story much more easily than words can.
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tell yourself that
"Bear, with paws extended."
"Dog, given plate of broccoli."
01:24
Can someone brainstorm with me?
I want to make a secure login with a remember me using cookies....
I have no way to make an approach into this...
I am thinking about saving 4 cookies (userid, timestamp, IP and generated random id) if each 4 equals the sessions saved in the database the login is succesfull else you need to login...
what do you guys think about that?
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why would you save that as 4 cookies?
do you want it to be insecure as possible?
How come insecure as possible?
@MikeM. I think you should find a library or framework that does it and either use it directly, or copy how they do it. And yeah....you don't need 4 cookies. You just need one - and you shouldn't be storing any 'secure' stuff on the client side like IP address.
well as most forums do is save a generated ID and save it in the session id
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@MikeM. save a key as cookie, keep the data secret
01:29
IP = no, a single IP can be used by several clients
It's not an IP only check
if userid + timestamp + ip + generated random id equals in the database then it outputs true....
214
A: "Keep Me Logged In" - the best approach

ircmaxellOK, let me put this bluntly: if you're putting user data, or anything derived from user data into a cookie for this purpose, you're doing something wrong. There. I said it. Now we can move on to the actual answer. What's wrong with hashing user data, you ask? Well, it comes down to exposure su...

thanks for that one, didn't know it was there.
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never trust client side data
I don't
but I neither think a userid is harmfull, as it will be shown on the profile.php page anyways
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01:31
why would you put a clients ip as a cookie if you already get that on the connection?
why would you show a users client id ?
oh lol I forgot that it was totally unnecessary
because it's too show the user profile.
to send the user a PM
etc.etc.etc.
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you already show the users unique name, why show an id?
@MikeM. you can include also screen resolution (as opposed to user agent it doesn't change often)
ID = shorter than the name
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if the id is shorter then the name, you are doing it wrong
01:33
stop suggesting things... just read ircmaxell's answer
how come?
id 1 = testaccount
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never show internal id's externally
I will @FlorianMargaine
@OIS stop spreading FUD
OIS do you know what it is going about?
01:34
it's perfectly fine to show user id
Thanks @FlorianMargaine

I was already like "wtf is he talking about"
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it can be fine, if you take security seriously
good night
going off florian?
an userid is not really harmful in this case...
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afaik a userid might be deleted if a user account is merged
01:36
good night Florian
@OIS if the userid is deleted, the sessions in the data table are aswell...
so then the uid + timestamp + ip + generated key == false
so the real user has to relogin
BRB
if you want additional security to ircmaxell suggestions you can do more
let's say i can access the computer and i can read its cookies
then i can replicate them on a second machine
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what if the user has multiple ips?
like I might be using soon
yes with mobile connections ip changes frequently
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or with multiple connections through a router
@OIS That's not really a problem for the forum user base that's a problem for the user itselves
The security however is.
@JecebahnYaledimacOndestal that's what you can do at any time even with a random generated id...
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why do you want to store it in cookies instead of a db/redis and store a key as cookie?
that is what is strange
That's what I am here for...
brainstorming regarding to this security...
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@MikeM. if yer talking security, of course its https only, with HSTS and preload
01:55
I am talking about security related to http
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http has no security
ie has no security
I don't think you get what I mean or you're just being a big troll...
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Im not sure I understand if you imply http has security
No I am not.
I am talking about a way to securely save a remember me
without it's easy to bypass like forum software mybb
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ok
01:59
it sets a random generated key to a cookie
but when you hijack the cookie you can login without any further notice of the other users....
no need for a username or password...
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save data in a db, not cookies, use a key in cookie or session, save cookie as https no js access, https with HSTS with preload only
https is no point...
at this moment...
and I am not saving harmfull data in a cookie...
If you care about security, which you should, HTTPS would probably be the first step.
It's not something for myself
it's something for us all.
if I release it I don't want to reach a handfful of 10 users
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the ip and uid are easy, timestamp is medium, generated key is what is difficult
02:03
I want to reach the bigger public...
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bigger public...
wtf are you even talking about anymore
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saving too much data in cookies
I don't think when you started knew what https was at all...
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on an insecure connection
02:04
@kelunik https is not an as big issue… it just hides your data from the very few people who could read it. (well, if you don't trust your LAN or ISP, well, ...)
@bwoebi O_o
@PeeHaa I just mean, the lack of https is not a classical attack vector … there are a lot more potential vectors…
@bwoebi Too many people don't care. And it is.
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@bwoebi erm, it hides all data if done right except that you connected to this domain
Just have a look at that Swedish security conference :-D
02:07
@kelunik well, as said, if you cannot trust your LAN, then yes. But that's not the usual vector.
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@bwoebi that is where HSTS comes in
CSP of course helps if you don't use IE
I love to see these kind of discussions regarding to 1 question :P
Still, there's nothing wrong with having HTTPS. It's just not the first step.
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https is like the basic of the basic
If you have secured everything else, feel free to add https
02:10
@bwoebi Nope.
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no, https is the first step to secure things
https is not a security
in itself
if you are afraid of MITM, which is very common with public wifi's
It's usually much more critical to have csrf vectors than lacking https. Because reading the raw data requires a MITM which you only can do if … well for example in a public Wifi, yes.
but csrf, everybody can do. Much more annoying.
Well, it is. HTTPS is more than just encryption. You also ensure integrity of that data.
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@kelunik no, not with just https
@bwoebi In any personal wifi using arp spoofing.
02:14
@kelunik but first secure your server and application, then do https. Https is worth nothing if your server is vulnerable (and somebody could grab your private key).
HTTPS is encryption and authentication
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@AndreaFaulds wtf no?
@AndreaFaulds authentication? … https…?!?
you mean that you can be sure that it's the server you talk to and not somebody else?
@bwoebi Yes. Authentication.
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auth of what? who?
02:16
oh okay
Transport Layer Security (TLS) and its predecessor, Secure Sockets Layer (SSL), are cryptographic protocols designed to provide communication security over the Internet. They use X.509 certificates and hence asymmetric cryptography to authenticate the counterparty with whom they are communicating, and to exchange a symmetric key. This session key is then used to encrypt data flowing between the parties. This allows for data/message confidentiality, and message authentication codes for message integrity and as a by-product, message authentication. Several versions of the protocols are in widespread...
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if you can trust the 3rd parties
there is a reason HSTS is a thing
and HSTS preload
CSP can be a bitch
do you know that mobile browsers support CSP in a half-ass way?
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yes
it's frustrating
they support CSP, but you can't specify other origins
so if you use CSP, you can't use a CDN
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02:19
I don't use CSP, but I really want to
Too many messages, thanks for the hit under my ass providing me with more knowledge :) <3 #NoHomo
you can. Just host everything on your server.
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heh
what about youtube?
it's ok in an iframe
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that's .... ugly...
02:20
how else do you do it anyway?
@bwoebi Which is "easy" once you don't use tls
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well, I don't use CSP cause it's not usable... but I really want to
@PeeHaa huh?
@OIS it's usable.
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if I could make a buisness internal app for fx or chrome I would
not app but site
02:22
miaou uses CSP
@bwoebi Serious if you don't use TLS everything is up for grabs, period
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csp or csp report or x-csp?
Content-Security-Policy:script-src 'self' ajax.googleapis.com
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and that works on mobile?
nope.
he's going to take off the last part :)
Well, the security side does work on mobile
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02:25
well, it "works"
\o/
#doctrine2 ORM 2.5.0-alpha1 is here! http://goo.gl/sVaVFF Please try it out and help us going through the planned 2.5.0 release schedule!
3
02:47
@Ocramius that issue summary could use a summary
user895378
@DaveRandom I'm pretty sure the only thing you need to do is store the unique identifying serial number assigned to each cert when you sign the CSR. Openssl just takes these serial numbers from a file (that you specify) where the previous serial number is stored.
user895378
According to RFC 2560 which defines OCSP, this is all you have to send for each requested certificate in an OCSP response:
user895378
   -- target certificate identifier
   -- certificate status value
   -- response validity interval
   -- optional extensions
user895378
So your identifier is the serial number and the status value is one of three explicit strings (also from RFC 2560):
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   -- good
   -- revoked
   -- unknown
user895378
02:52
So basically if you want to support OCSP in the future you would want to keep an index mapping these serial numbers to the cert (I'd probably just store the whole cert along with the CSR and whatnot) and just keep a status code for the current revocation state.
user895378
also: configurable OCSP stapling for stream servers would be a cool feature for 7
user895378
^ lol, I had just mentioned this earlier in the week. I'm actually going to try to do this because I also want to support OCSP stapling.
user895378
It's the one openssl feature I want to add for 7.
user895378
I am also going to add lots of socket option support for stream sockets if it's the last thing I do. I'm going to try to support multicast but we'll see how it goes.
user895378
The only issue with server-side OCSP in userland is you have to periodically query the CA to get the OCSP response you plan to staple. This is obviously not something we can make PHP do on it's own. I think the thing to do may be to allow registration of a callback ("ocsp_staple_cb" or something).
user895378
03:02
Then when a client handshake requests OCSP stapling it would be the callback's job to return an openssl resource containing the OCSP response (probably something we'd need to add a function or two to generate from raw data). That way it can be the server's job to query the CA's OCSP server periodically and retrieve the current data for its cert(s).
@SaraGolemon What are you plotting? (re: "Mind if I hook the compiler?")
user895378
Though ... I'm currently using SNI to serve multiple different server certificates on the same IP ... Not sure exactly how to reconcile multiple certs with the callback. Will need to have a think about that one.
user895378
Way to break up my wall of text, @AndreaFaulds. You'd think this was a public chat or something.
@rdlowrey :p
user895378
03:22
@DaveRandom Good news ... OCSP requests can be made over HTTP(s) and the response entity body is the "binary value of the DER encoding of the OCSPResponse" ... so it should be as simple as adding a couple of functions. I'm thinking:
user895378
resource openssl_ocsp_read(string $rawData);
array openssl_ocsp_parse(resource $ocspResource);
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And for the server-side context go with something like:
user895378
// periodically update the $ocspResource in your app
stream_context_set_option($sock, 'ssl', 'ocsp_staple_cb', function() use (&$ocspResource) {
    return $ocspResource;
);
/topic @rdlowrey talks to himself about PHP, and stuff. Chat Guidlines : be @rdlowrey
user895378
Pretty much, yeah. I was out of commission for a good 4-6 weeks so I gotta make up for lost time :)
03:30
@rdlowrey What, were Auryn on tour? ducks
user895378
lol ... like ... literally lol.
hello guys i got a non coding related question, but about concept. I want to know how do you redirect to https or specifically is it possible to redirect at dns level from http to https. I feel it'd be much safer because your request is sent twice with all data once over http and then https. or that's not how it works?
user895378
@AndreaFaulds night
let say i want all my links to start with https:
user895378
03:41
@MuhammadUmer Well ...
is it possible
to
do it at my domain name control panel
user895378
First: this is not something that's done at the DNS level.
ok
i just thought
since i can redirect mydomain.com to www.mydomain.com
or www.mydomain.com to abc.heroku.com
user895378
The way it works is to respond to the request for the unencrypted resource with a 3xx and a Location: https://site.com/same-page-you-requested
user895378
Well you can redirect domain names at that layer.
user895378
03:43
But http and https are protocols
but not protocols
?
ok i'll accept that
but
user895378
Protocols are just rules for exchanging data between two parties. The DNS system only helps the two parties connect.
user895378
The protocol doesn't enter into the equation until your connection is established.
alright, let me ask you this. If post request with data is made to http by mistake
user895378
As for the safety of redirecting to https:// after you've already made an unencrypted request ...
03:45
does it mean post body is already potentially compromised/able.
user895378
The HTTP spec actually prohibits clients from redirecting requests made via HTTP methods that are not "idempotent."
@MuhammadUmer You should have a look at HSTS and redirect all other HTTP traffic to the HTTPS version.
user895378
@MuhammadUmer yes, it does.
can you elaborate
so data "WAS" sent over http
user895378
Well I was going to say that in practice most of your redirects are going to be sent in response to GET requests.
user895378
03:46
@MuhammadUmer yes.
user895378
You can't control what the client chooses to send you and to what address or what protocol they use.
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All you can do is tell them they "did it wrong" by sending them a redirect response.
i see
what's hsts.. do you know about it?
user895378
But a user sending a POST request (and not an automated script) will have gotten to your form by clicking a link (a GET request). So it's kind of your responsibility to not show that form on an unencrypted connection.
user895378
If someone manually POSTs form data to the wrong URI it's their own dumb fault.
03:49
i see
user895378
HTTP Strict Transport Security (HSTS) is a web security policy mechanism which is necessary to protect secure HTTPS websites against downgrade attacks, and which greatly simplifies protection against cookie hijacking. It allows web servers to declare that web browsers (or other complying user agents) should only interact with it using secure HTTPS connections, and never via the insecure HTTP protocol. HSTS is an IETF standards track protocol and is specified in RFC 6797. The HSTS Policy is communicated by the server to the user agent via a HTTP response header field named "Strict-Transport-Security...
so its just a header you can send
user895378
Hope that helps you a bit. I'm calling it a night for now though. Good luck!
which will make all http requests on that page into https
yea
thanks
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@MuhammadUmer no.
03:50
Hey guys! Can anyone tellme the difference between 'post' and 'get' request in form? Which is better to use??
post is better cause you can send more data
user895378
@MuhammadUmer It will tell the client that it should only make encrypted requests. You can't magically turn a plaintext request into an encrypted request.
@ArjunTamble There's no better, there are different use cases.
ok ill look into it
user895378
HTTP method has no bearing on the amount of data you can send.
user895378
03:51
Anyway, I'm really leaving now :)
gnight thanks
What are the difference?@kelunik
hey
@ArjunTamble
do this course
So, what are the difference between get n post?
it will teach you all the basics you need about concepts
03:53
Alright. I'll get into it...
diff are these get send data in url like this abc.com/form?name=dsj
post send it in response body
so it's not visible in url
and in post you can really big amounts. say whole gb files.
I get it.
that course is awesome
free, taught by reddit cofounder, and fun
he's young so he doesn't sound boring
Alright
04:40
@AndreaFaulds Mostly good things. Wanna do some clever static analysis among other things.
"clever" worries me more than "evil"
04:54
"good" and "evil" are such subjective concepts though, aren't they?
05:46
Can someone reply to the return types RFC thread and.reference the discussion that took place previously? I'm on mobile so that would be quite difficult.
@SaraGolemon eyes supiciously
 
3 hours later…
08:20
morning :) (nobody in the room bot I'll throw the question anyway):
I'm getting a memory leak from github.com/php/php-src/blob/master/Zend/zend_ast.c#L344, when using zend_ast_copy()
something like zend_ast *tmp_ast = zend_ast_copy(ast);
Is this a bug on zend_ast_copy() or I'm just doing something silly?
*but
09:24
Morning
 
2 hours later…
11:12
@marcio /cc @NikiC
11:23
morning @DaveRandom
mornings
thought you might be interested although may also be PEBKAC
@marcio Probably you're doing something silly ... or a combination of that and zend_ast_copy being a bad name
zend_ast_copy is a function that copies an AST from the arena allocator onto the heap
Unless you're dealing with static initializes you shouldn't have to use it
posted on January 18, 2015 by nikic

* Methods that do not specify an explicit visibility (e.g. `function method()`) will now have the `MODIFIER_PUBLIC` flag set. This also means that their `isPublic()` method will return true. * Declaring a property as abstract or static is now an e...

11:58
@Nikic all right, I was using zend_ast_copy() for the wrong task :p thought it was just going to copy a zend_ast for me so I could modify the copy without taint the original one.
@marcio Nope, we don't have anything for that as of now
because right now the compile is very straighforward, without doing much ast transform
I'm working on a possible feature that would require a little ast modification
what's the feature?
user3949359
Why is the result of my Mongodb query an ellipsis in cmd?
but found a way to do it without copying the ast, though it would be nice to be able to copy it
About the feature, I'm calling it "batch use statements" (name is horrible) that allows more dry use declarations, but still experimenting with it
12:02
Monring
for ex, sometimes we have very long namespaces like Symfony\Foo\Bar\Baz\Biz\Http and ones would like to use many classes declared on that given monstrous namespace
basically it would now be possible to use Symfony\Foo\Bar\Baz\Biz\Http{ Request, Response, Redirect, ... }
@NikiC \o/ fresh release
@marcio Basically, you're implementing something like wildcart like in python or java...
@Leri unfortunately wildcards won't be possible :( but at least you don't need to repeat The\Monstruous\Namespace\To\Get\What\You\Want for every class|trait|const|function you'd like to import from a package
@marcio looks like uses in rust ^^
12:09
Honestly, I don't like and don't use wildcarts. Your feature.. I may use it if I have to write use statements by hand but most of the time I have descent IDE
Bottom line is: Are you sure effort worth the result?
@NikiC really? have to take a look at it, rust got my attention but I ended up dedicating my time to Golang.
@Leri it's done already, and the amount of code needed was almost nothing. With the ast based stuff it got too easy to hack PHP :P
Hello!
@marcio Yeah. For example use option::Option::{self, Some, None}; imports option::Option, option::Option::Some and option::Option::None
@marcio I have not looked at the recent php-src, /me adds one more thing on todo list
Can someone help me? :D
Let's say i have 2 tables (users and commands(contains array with user_ids)

Which would be the best way to show command with all players?
For example, command 1 contains user id's of 5,7,9,13
It should return
user name with id 5
user name with id 7
user name with id 9
user name with id 13
12:14
@NikiC oh that's exactly what I've tried to accomplish. Rust is almost reaching 1.0 now, looks like a good time to try it again :)
@Tediee Uhhhm how are you storing your data?
@Tediee You'll probably need a third table that maps users to commands, then you can join them. (assuming you're talking about database tables)
@PeeHaa i have tables
users (id, name, ....)
commands (id, members (string with user ids (1,2,3,4...), ...)
where if field memebrs each value is id in users table
12:17
Look up database normalization
So each user can be associated with more than one command?
You're doing it wrong...
Yes.
One solution is run multiple queries... Select members from commands, explode them.
Foreach every array item and look up in users table
I wanted to know better way :D
12:18
Never ever store flattened data in a "normal" rdbms
Ok, i'll read about normalization.
Ok, thanks for suggestion :)
Hm, it's really weird that ** binds even more tightly than unary ops
user924016
Mornings
12:44
Monring @RonniSkansing
user924016
=]
Ouh... This schema will be good? I am beginner....

http://i.imgur.com/ohuCT6K.jpg
Much better, but a_something is a terrible name
@rdlowrey Well, the serial number is included in the cert, so you don't even need to keep that external mapping as long as you keep a copy of the cert (which I will be doing for the time being). What I can't figure out though is whether the OCSP server URI needs to be included in the intermediate cert or not - presumably it does but I can't find an unequivocal yes or no to that question.
Umm.. But then how I can store it? How to reffer song to some author?
12:56
If it doesn't then I can't figure out the mechanism by which revocation of the intermediate cert would propagate, but I wonder if I'm missing something, or maybe it's just so obvious that no-one bothers to say that explicitly
@Tediee your sxhema looks good it's just the field name
Uh. Thank you. The now I need to rewrite all my code :)
Anytime! :)
@Tediee I personally would say it's probably worth linking a song directly to an "author" ("artist" would be a more common description) because a) not all songs come from an album and b) not all albums have a single artist

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