Updated Running Friendica with SSL (markdown)

MartinFarrent 2012-04-02 07:56:22 -07:00
parent 05b653f801
commit c37b9baaf0

@ -2,7 +2,7 @@ If you are running your own Friendica site, you may want to use SSL (https) to e
To do that on a domain of your own, you have to obtain a certificate from a trusted organization (so-called self-signed certificates that are popular among geeks dont work very well with Friendica, because they can cause disturbances in other people's browsers).
If you are reading this document before actually installing Friendica, you might want to consider a very simple option: Go for a shared hosting account _without your own domain name_. That way, your address will be something like ``yourname.yourprovidersname.com``, which isn't very fancy compared to ``yourname.com``. But it will still be your very own site, and you will _usually_ be able to hitch a lift on your provider's SSL certificate. That means that you won't need to configure SSL at all - it will simply work out of the box.
If you are reading this document before actually installing Friendica, you might want to consider a very simple option: Go for a shared hosting account _without your own domain name_. That way, your address will be something like ``yourname.yourprovidersname.com``, which isn't very fancy compared to ``yourname.com``. But it will still be your very own site, and you will _usually_ be able to hitch a lift on your provider's SSL certificate. That means that you won't need to configure SSL at all - it will simply work out of the box when people type ``https`` instead of ``http``.
## Shared hosts ##