I found open-ssl to be much harder to use. Do you just manually make new certificates with the CA in CLI?
I found open-ssl to be much harder to use. Do you just manually make new certificates with the CA in CLI?
At some point it’s good to let things die
In that case, i recommend step-ca, which is a certificate authority server with acme support anyone can self host. The setup took a while but it’s been running for months now without problems for me.
No proper CA should give out a certificate for an IP, that’s a no go by the common rules.
The background is that certificate revocation is a broken system and having short lived certificates makes the problem go away. You don’t need to worry about how to tell people that some certificate is bad if it’s only valid for a few days.
Ideally, certificates would only be valid for a few days, it should be automated anyway. This has other downsides as I can imagine, like creation of more traffic. My self signed CA for my home LAN has 4 days as standard, and it works perfectly fine.
How about parsing the source files?
SCP-5300 😮
At that point it’s an act of rebellion against that nations authority over its territory, and the police/armed forces may step in.
I see what you’re doing but that chain of thought doesn’t lead anywhere.
Under very special circumstances an argument can be made for this, at least
While true I feel like your comment misses the point. A raspberry pi is just a computer, not a magic solution box that’s kept maintained and updated by some guy. Their product isn’t a service, it’s just the device.
Return impl go boom
Reading this, the return impl complexity seemed insane.
Then, by accident, i programmed on a pet project until 4 in the night, and boom, I’ve had the exact problem they’re solving. Remembered that I usually need an extra lifetime in the impl definition, and boom, it worked. Doesn’t seem so insane anymore.
(Was working on a little Webservice with warp, and returning their filters from a function)
Why had?
Iirc you can also just disable it with unset HISTFILE
. This will reset when you open a new session unless you put it in the .zshrc
or something.
Agreed. But if big brother really wants, they can detect a weird program running, a weird hardware being on it, or just that someone is tabbing around without actually doing something.
It’s a hard fork by now, but the switch should still be pretty painless.
I think they meant private as in private person, not privacy
This. Thank you
In what way? Works for me
The reason is that M$ pays the manufacturer to put their crapware on it