SSL_CTX_add_session() adds the session B<c> to the context B<ctx>. The
reference count for session B<c> is incremented by 1. If a session with
the same session id already exists, the old session is removed by calling
-L<SSL_SESSION_free(3)|SSL_SESSION_free(3)>.
+L<SSL_SESSION_free(3)>.
SSL_CTX_remove_session() removes the session B<c> from the context B<ctx>.
-L<SSL_SESSION_free(3)|SSL_SESSION_free(3)> is called once for B<c>.
+L<SSL_SESSION_free(3)> is called once for B<c>.
SSL_add_session() and SSL_remove_session() are synonyms for their
SSL_CTX_*() counterparts.
flag then the internal cache will not be populated automatically by new
sessions negotiated by the SSL/TLS implementation, even though the internal
cache will be searched automatically for session-resume requests (the
-latter can be surpressed by SSL_SESS_CACHE_NO_INTERNAL_LOOKUP). So the
+latter can be suppressed by SSL_SESS_CACHE_NO_INTERNAL_LOOKUP). So the
application can use SSL_CTX_add_session() directly to have full control
over the sessions that can be resumed if desired.
=head1 SEE ALSO
-L<ssl(3)|ssl(3)>,
-L<SSL_CTX_set_session_cache_mode(3)|SSL_CTX_set_session_cache_mode(3)>,
-L<SSL_SESSION_free(3)|SSL_SESSION_free(3)>
+L<ssl(3)>,
+L<SSL_CTX_set_session_cache_mode(3)>,
+L<SSL_SESSION_free(3)>
=cut