uacme
certify
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uacme | certify | |
---|---|---|
6 | 41 | |
411 | 1,448 | |
- | 1.0% | |
4.7 | 9.7 | |
28 days ago | 25 days ago | |
C | C# | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 only | GNU General Public License v3.0 or later |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
uacme
- Uacme: ACMEv2 client written in plain C with minimal dependencies
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Retrospective and Technical Details on the Recent Firefox Outage
> So you're saying telemetry should be handled as a separate process that has nothing to do with the rest of the browser, and treated like a hostile service? [... T]his was a dumb bug and it is completely unreasonable to expect some kind of adversarial design "just in case a freak bug triggers on telemetry network requests".
I absolutely agree that this a dumb bug having little to nothing to do with telemetry. It is not even the first case-sensitivity HTTP/3 bug I’m personally encountering in the course of completely casual use[1].
At the same time, you know what? I’m glad you suggested this, because I certainly didn’t think of it. Yes, in an ideal world, telemetry absolutely should be a separate process (or thread, or at least not share an event loop—a separate “hang domain”, a vat[2] if you want). And so should everything off the critical path.
I’m not saying Firefox is bad for doing it differently. I’m saying it’s silly that Firefox is forced to play OS to such an extent because the actual one isn’t up to its demands.
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Who should consider using BSD over Linux and why?
Hmm .... not sure i'd necessarily say that's where i'm coming from. i'd be happy with a mix'n'match OS if most of the individual components were created and maintained with thought and care. (As distinct from e.g. "Over the last couple of weekends I learned Rust, and here's my first full program, an encrypted chat server. Enjoy!") Like, SQLite is not maintained by the OpenBSD project, but i believe it's generally considered to be a high-quality codebase. And i recently started using uacme on my server; i don't feel competent enough in C to comment directly on the quality of the codebase, but this and this indicate to me that the author has a clue (and in fact, i feel confident that they have far more of a clue than i do).
certify
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Seeking Guidance: SSL Certification for a Local Server in Windows 2019 Data Center Environment
Option 2+: If your public DNS is hosted by a provider that has Win-ACME or Certify the Web support, use Let's Encrypt and automate the whole thing.
- Renew SSL Exchange 2016 - cmdlet
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Google Pushing For 90 Day SSL/TLS Certificates - Time For Automation
I use certify the web for the rd gateway
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How will you handle 90 day SSL expiration?
For Exchange and Remote Desktop Service we are using Certify The Web with Lets Encrypt. Works really well.
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SSL Certificates, who's responsibility to maintain on server?
Certify the Web: https://certifytheweb.com/
- LDAPS Certificate auto-renews but not to NTDS Personal Store
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Is open source really a gimmick these days for getting initial traction?
https://certifytheweb.com Felt like a complete bait-and-switch to me.
- Exchange 2019 Hybrid Certificate Renewal
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DigiCert Certificate Management
If you're managing Windows Servers and need certificates on them, ditch what you're doing and get this: https://certifytheweb.com
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Ask HN: What are your “scratch own itch” projects?
It's worth doing! A few projects I've done:
I once needed a database of EV charging locations, but at the time(2011) there were no open databases, so I built https://openchargemap.org, that now serves millions of API queries per month for other apps and services
For another project, I recently wanted to control my guitar amp (a Positive Grid Spark) from my computer instead of using a mobile app, so I built https://soundshed.com which is both a bluetooth web app and an electron app you can install. It now has a few thousand users :)
And finally, another time I had some SSL certificates I needed to manage for another project (for the above mentioned https://openchargemap.org), so I built a GUI to manage and renew certificates on Windows. It's now a commercial app with hundreds of thousands of users and it's my full time job: https://certifytheweb.com
So yeah, worth doing!
What are some alternatives?
acme.sh - A pure Unix shell script implementing ACME client protocol
win-acme - A simple ACME client for Windows (for use with Let's Encrypt et al.)
Nginx Proxy Manager - Docker container for managing Nginx proxy hosts with a simple, powerful interface
letsencrypt - Certbot is EFF's tool to obtain certs from Let's Encrypt and (optionally) auto-enable HTTPS on your server. It can also act as a client for any other CA that uses the ACME protocol.
Posh-ACME - PowerShell module and ACME client to create certificates from Let's Encrypt (or other ACME CA)
LetsEncrypt-PRTG - Post request script to install an SSL certificate obtained with Certify the Web or win-acme in PRTG.
acme-companion - Automated ACME SSL certificate generation for nginx-proxy
easy-rsa - easy-rsa - Simple shell based CA utility
glewlwyd - Experimental Single Sign On server, OAuth2, Openid Connect, multiple factor authentication with, HOTP/TOTP, FIDO2, TLS Certificates, etc. extensible via plugins