» Download Kerberos V3.1 for OpenVMS Alpha and OpenVMS I64
(November 29, 2007)
» Download Kerberos V2.0 for OpenVMS VAX
(October 16, 2003)
» Download "Kerberized Telnet" client and server kits
for use with HP TCP/IP Services 5.3 or 5.4
HP is pleased to announce a new, customer release version of Kerberos for OpenVMS,
based on MIT Kerberos V5 Release 1.4.1 including security patches. Kerberos Version 3.1 runs on OpenVMS Alpha
and I64 V8.3 and higher.
Kerberos Version 3.1 for OpenVMS (included in OpenVMS Version 8.3-1H1)
contains support for IPv6 at the same level as MIT's Kerberos V5 1.4.1
sources. The IPv6 functionality allows for Kerberos authentication to
happen over IPv6; however, administrator functions will still need to
function over IPv4 for this release. See the Kerberos for OpenVMS
Release Notes
for more information.
Kerberos Version 3.0 and 2.0 are also available for download. Version 3.0 runs on OpenVMS Alpha V7.3-2 and higher,
and OpenVMS I64 V8.2 and higher. Version 2.0 runs on OpenVMS Alpha V7.2-2,
7.3-1, and 7.3-2, and OpenVMS VAX V7.3.
» Documentation
» Download Kerberos
» Download Kerberized Telnet kits
» Software Support
» Source code
Using Kerberos with TCP/IP Services for OpenVMS, you can
secure your Telnet connections between
OpenVMS systems. See the Kerberos for OpenVMS
Installation and Configuration Guide
for detailed instructions.
For information about Kerberos for OpenVMS, including
client programs, example programs, information about programming your Kerberos for
OpenVMS application, and reference information for the GSSAPIs and KRB5 APIs,
see HP Open Source Security for OpenVMS, Volume 3: Kerberos
in PDF or
HTML.
Kerberos is a network authentication protocol designed to provide
strong authentication for client/server applications by using
secret-key cryptography.
Kerberos was created by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology as a
solution for network security. The Kerberos protocol uses
strong cryptography so that a client can prove its identity to a
server (and vice versa) across an insecure network connection. After a
client and server have used Kerberos to prove their identity, they can
also encrypt all of their communications to assure privacy and data
integrity.
Kerberos is freely available from MIT, under a copyright permission
notice. Kerberos for OpenVMS is supplied by HP under the terms of the
license from the Massachusetts
Institute of Technology. For more information on the Kerberos
license, please see http://web.mit.edu/kerberos/www/.
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