The easyp pea says: My favourite peas are easy HTTPS
Features Installation Extensions Configuration Troubleshooting Development Releases Bugs
We’re excited to announce the alpha1 release of easyp 0.1.3. This alpha has focused on eliminating dependancies that could impair the port to Redox OS. Removing vestigal dependacies may help other platforms too. For example, the Linux binary seems to have shrunk from 2,810,784 to 2,638,752 bytes.
NOTE: this means that easyp will NOT validate that the domain corresponds to a local IP address before reuesting a certificate for a domain. I originally added this validation to ensure that easyp could not be used as part of a DDOS attack against that domain. In the short term I doubt that there will be enough easyp servers to mount much of a DDOS attack anyway, but this should be re-evaluated later.
We’re excited to announce the alpha2 release of easyp 0.1.3. This is the first release of easyp to successfully build a (untested) binary for redox. This alpha continues the work on Redox OS compatibility and includes additional improvements to the build system and dependency management.
Quickstart for the latest development version (Linux):
The major improvement in alpha3 of easyp 0.1.3 is that the server now starts up. Alas it does not seem to respond to connections in any way. The redox in the redoxer docker image doesn’t have curl, but I managed to write some simple tests in pure bash. These tests worked in Linux but not Redox. This suggests that easyp still doesn’t work on Redox.
Quickstart for the latest development version (Linux):