Hacker News new | ask | show | jobs
by teoruiz 4451 days ago
Weird. Can you try "openssl version -a" on both? Like this:

  $ openssl version -a
  OpenSSL 1.0.1 14 Mar 2012
  built on: Mon Apr  7 20:33:29 UTC 2014
  platform: debian-amd64
  options:  bn(64,64) rc4(8x,int) des(idx,cisc,16,int) blowfish(idx)
  compiler: cc -fPIC -DOPENSSL_PIC -DZLIB -DOPENSSL_THREADS -D_REENTRANT -DDSO_DLFCN 
  -DHAVE_DLFCN_H -m64 -DL_ENDIAN -DTERMIO -g -O2 -fstack-protector --param=ssp-buffer-size=4
  -Wformat -Wformat-security -Werror=format-security -D_FORTIFY_SOURCE=2 
  -Wl,-Bsymbolic-functions -Wl,-z,relro -Wa,
  --noexecstack -Wall -DOPENSSL_NO_TLS1_2_CLIENT -DOPENSSL_MAX_TLS1_2_CIPHER_LENGTH=50 
  -DMD32_REG_T=int -DOPENSSL_IA32_SSE2 -DOPENSSL_BN_ASM_MONT -DOPENSSL_BN_ASM_MONT5 
  -DOPENSSL_BN_ASM_GF2m -DSHA1_ASM -DSHA256_ASM -DSHA512_ASM -DMD5_ASM -DAES_ASM 
  -DVPAES_ASM -DBSAES_ASM -DWHIRLPOOL_ASM -DGHASH_ASM
  OPENSSLDIR: "/usr/lib/ssl"
In any case, it could be that something else (not built with OpenSSL) is listening on port 443 in the one that's "safe".