diff options
author | Daniel Roesler <diafygi@gmail.com> | 2015-11-05 07:46:57 -0800 |
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committer | Daniel Roesler <diafygi@gmail.com> | 2015-11-05 07:46:57 -0800 |
commit | af084d541abeff4acab4b15ccd86cb4587646b53 (patch) | |
tree | dbc3d13cb78ce19829bc7d2c4ae759892fbe7046 /README.md | |
parent | 8294ed7af3c49252f1b3e8699332f7811f4e4d77 (diff) |
cleaned up various descriptions
Diffstat (limited to 'README.md')
-rw-r--r-- | README.md | 6 |
1 files changed, 3 insertions, 3 deletions
@@ -10,8 +10,8 @@ to run it on your your server as root, and it tries to edit your apache/nginx config files. I love the Let's Encrypt devs dearly, but there's no way I'm going to trust -their script to run on my server as root and be able to edit my server configs. -I'd just like the free ssl certificate, please. +their script to run on my server as root, be able to edit my server configs, and +have acces to my private keys. I'd just like the free ssl certificate, please. So I made a script that does that. You generate your private key and certificate signing request (CSR) like normal, then run `sign_csr.py` with your CSR to get @@ -307,7 +307,7 @@ Here's a website that is using a certificate signed using `sign_csr.py`: ##Feedback/Contributing I'd love to receive feedback, issues, and pull requests to make this script -better. The script itself, `sign_csr.py`, is less than 400 lines of code, so +better. The script itself, `sign_csr.py`, is less than 500 lines of code, so feel free to read through it! I tried to comment things well and make it crystal clear what it's doing. |