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#autoencryptlocalhost — Public Fediverse posts

Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #autoencryptlocalhost, aggregated by home.social.

  1. 🥳 Multiple major releases today

    • @small-tech/auto-encrypt v5.0.0 (codeberg.org/small-tech/auto-e)
    • @small-tech/auto-encrypt-localhost v10.0.0 (codeberg.org/small-tech/auto-e)
    • @small-tech/https v6.0.0 (codeberg.org/small-tech/https/)

    These releases bring short-lived certificates, IP Address (IPv4 and IPv6) support, and ACME Renewal Information (ARI) support to Auto Encrypt and @small-tech/https, implement a consistent asynchronous API across all three packages, and include loads of little fixes and code quality improvements.

    This brings us very close to getting Web Numbers¹ support implemented natively in Kitten².

    OCSP support is removed from Auto Encrypt and Windows support is dropped from all three packages as Microsoft is complicit in Israel’s genocide of the Palestinian people³ and Small Technology Foundation⁴ stands in solidarity with the Boycott, Divestment, and Sanctions (BDS) movement. Furthermore, Windows is an ad-infested and surveillance-ridden dumpster fire of an operating system and, alongside supporting genocide, you are putting both yourself and others at risk by using it.

    Enjoy!

    💕

    🇵🇸 To support families facing genocide in Gaza, consider donating to them via Gaza Verified: gaza-verified.org/donate/

    ¹ ar.al/2025/06/25/web-numbers/
    ² kitten.small-web.org/
    ³ bdsmovement.net/microsoft
    small-tech.org/

    #SmallWeb #SmallTech #AutoEncrypt #AutoEncryptLocalhost #https #TLS #NodeJS #web #dev #ACME #LetsEncrypt #WebNumbers #Kitten #BDS #Palestine #Gaza #FreePalestine

  2. 🥳 Auto-Encrypt Localhost version 9.0.0 released

    Bye bye, Windows.

    • Windows is no longer supported as Microsoft is complicit in Israel’s genocide of the Palestinian people¹ and Small Technology Foundation² stands in solidarity with the Boycott, Divestment, and Sanctions (BDS) movement³. Windows is an ad-infested and surveillance-ridden dumpster fire of an operating system and, alongside supporting genocide, you are putting both yourself and others at risk by using it.

    Enjoy!

    💕

    About Auto-Encrypt Localhost:

    codeberg.org/small-tech/auto-e

    Auto Encrypt Localhost is similar to the Go utility [mkcert](github.com/FiloSottile/mkcert/) but with the following important differences:

    1. It’s written in pure JavaScript for Node.js.

    2. It does not require certutil to be installed.

    3. It uses a different technique to install its certificate authority in the system trust store of macOS.

    4. It uses enterprise policies on all platforms to get Firefox to include its certificate authority from the system trust store.

    5. In addition to its Command-Line Interface, it can be used programmatically to automatically handle local development certificate provisioning while creating your server.

    Auto-Encrypt Localhost is licensed under AGPL version 3.0.

    #AutoEncryptLocalhost #SmallTech #SmallWeb #localhost #TLS #SSL #certificates #web #security #dev #FOSS #israel #microsoft #BigTech #genocide #Palestine #StopIsrael #FreePalestine

    ¹ bdsmovement.net/microsoft
    ² small-tech.org/
    ³ bdsmovement.net/

  3. 👋🤓 Goodbye Site.js, Hello Kitten!

    I started working on creating a Small Web¹ server (a peer-to-peer Web server) six years ago² with Site.js.

    Building Site.js was my first attempt. And it resulted in:

    • Auto Encrypt (automatic Let’s Encrypt certificates): codeberg.org/small-tech/auto-e

    • Auto Encrypt Localhost (automatic localhost TLS certificates): codeberg.org/small-tech/auto-e

    • @small-tech/https (drop-in Node.js https module replacement with automatic TLS certs everywhere): codeberg.org/small-tech/https

    • JSDB: In-process, in-memory JavaScript database that persists to append-only JavaScript logs: codeberg.org/small-tech/jsdb

    As Site.js reached an evolutionary dead-end, and as I learned from my experiements with replicated data types that replicated data types are *not* a prerequisite for a decentralised web (actual topological decentralisation and ease of use are), I started writing a new server/platform called Kitten from scratch while still making use of the tried and tested modules listed above.

    Last week, I switched over our last site using Site.js to Kitten and, with that, today I’ve sunset³ Site.js:

    sitejs.org

    For its successor, please see Kitten:

    kitten.small-web.org

    If you want to support our work at the Small Technology Foundation, please consider becoming a patron:

    small-tech.org/fund-us

    :kitten:💕

    ¹ ar.al/2024/06/24/small-web-com
    ² ar.al/2019/08/26/introducing-s
    ³ Using our instance of Look Over There!: look-over-there.small-web.org

    #SiteJS #SmallWeb #SmallTech #peerToPeerWeb #SmallTechnologyFoundation #AutoEncrypt #AutoEncryptLocalhost #JSDB #JavaScriptDatabase #https #TLS

  4. 👋🤓 Goodbye Site.js, Hello Kitten!

    I started working on creating a Small Web¹ server (a peer-to-peer Web server) six years ago² with Site.js.

    Building Site.js was my first attempt. And it resulted in:

    • Auto Encrypt (automatic Let’s Encrypt certificates): codeberg.org/small-tech/auto-e

    • Auto Encrypt Localhost (automatic localhost TLS certificates): codeberg.org/small-tech/auto-e

    • @small-tech/https (drop-in Node.js https module replacement with automatic TLS certs everywhere): codeberg.org/small-tech/https

    • JSDB: In-process, in-memory JavaScript database that persists to append-only JavaScript logs: codeberg.org/small-tech/jsdb

    As Site.js reached an evolutionary dead-end, and as I learned from my experiements with replicated data types that replicated data types are *not* a prerequisite for a decentralised web (actual topological decentralisation and ease of use are), I started writing a new server/platform called Kitten from scratch while still making use of the tried and tested modules listed above.

    Last week, I switched over our last site using Site.js to Kitten and, with that, today I’ve sunset³ Site.js:

    sitejs.org

    For its successor, please see Kitten:

    kitten.small-web.org

    If you want to support our work at the Small Technology Foundation, please consider becoming a patron:

    small-tech.org/fund-us

    :kitten:💕

    ¹ ar.al/2024/06/24/small-web-com
    ² ar.al/2019/08/26/introducing-s
    ³ Using our instance of Look Over There!: look-over-there.small-web.org

    #SiteJS #SmallWeb #SmallTech #peerToPeerWeb #SmallTechnologyFoundation #AutoEncrypt #AutoEncryptLocalhost #JSDB #JavaScriptDatabase #https #TLS

  5. 👋🤓 Goodbye Site.js, Hello Kitten!

    I started working on creating a Small Web¹ server (a peer-to-peer Web server) six years ago² with Site.js.

    Building Site.js was my first attempt. And it resulted in:

    • Auto Encrypt (automatic Let’s Encrypt certificates): codeberg.org/small-tech/auto-e

    • Auto Encrypt Localhost (automatic localhost TLS certificates): codeberg.org/small-tech/auto-e

    • @small-tech/https (drop-in Node.js https module replacement with automatic TLS certs everywhere): codeberg.org/small-tech/https

    • JSDB: In-process, in-memory JavaScript database that persists to append-only JavaScript logs: codeberg.org/small-tech/jsdb

    As Site.js reached an evolutionary dead-end, and as I learned from my experiements with replicated data types that replicated data types are *not* a prerequisite for a decentralised web (actual topological decentralisation and ease of use are), I started writing a new server/platform called Kitten from scratch while still making use of the tried and tested modules listed above.

    Last week, I switched over our last site using Site.js to Kitten and, with that, today I’ve sunset³ Site.js:

    sitejs.org

    For its successor, please see Kitten:

    kitten.small-web.org

    If you want to support our work at the Small Technology Foundation, please consider becoming a patron:

    small-tech.org/fund-us

    :kitten:💕

    ¹ ar.al/2024/06/24/small-web-com
    ² ar.al/2019/08/26/introducing-s
    ³ Using our instance of Look Over There!: look-over-there.small-web.org

    #SiteJS #SmallWeb #SmallTech #peerToPeerWeb #SmallTechnologyFoundation #AutoEncrypt #AutoEncryptLocalhost #JSDB #JavaScriptDatabase #https #TLS

  6. 👋🤓 Goodbye Site.js, Hello Kitten!

    I started working on creating a Small Web¹ server (a peer-to-peer Web server) six years ago² with Site.js.

    Building Site.js was my first attempt. And it resulted in:

    • Auto Encrypt (automatic Let’s Encrypt certificates): codeberg.org/small-tech/auto-e

    • Auto Encrypt Localhost (automatic localhost TLS certificates): codeberg.org/small-tech/auto-e

    • @small-tech/https (drop-in Node.js https module replacement with automatic TLS certs everywhere): codeberg.org/small-tech/https

    • JSDB: In-process, in-memory JavaScript database that persists to append-only JavaScript logs: codeberg.org/small-tech/jsdb

    As Site.js reached an evolutionary dead-end, and as I learned from my experiements with replicated data types that replicated data types are *not* a prerequisite for a decentralised web (actual topological decentralisation and ease of use are), I started writing a new server/platform called Kitten from scratch while still making use of the tried and tested modules listed above.

    Last week, I switched over our last site using Site.js to Kitten and, with that, today I’ve sunset³ Site.js:

    sitejs.org

    For its successor, please see Kitten:

    kitten.small-web.org

    If you want to support our work at the Small Technology Foundation, please consider becoming a patron:

    small-tech.org/fund-us

    :kitten:💕

    ¹ ar.al/2024/06/24/small-web-com
    ² ar.al/2019/08/26/introducing-s
    ³ Using our instance of Look Over There!: look-over-there.small-web.org

    #SiteJS #SmallWeb #SmallTech #peerToPeerWeb #SmallTechnologyFoundation #AutoEncrypt #AutoEncryptLocalhost #JSDB #JavaScriptDatabase #https #TLS

  7. 👋🤓 Goodbye Site.js, Hello Kitten!

    I started working on creating a Small Web¹ server (a peer-to-peer Web server) six years ago² with Site.js.

    Building Site.js was my first attempt. And it resulted in:

    • Auto Encrypt (automatic Let’s Encrypt certificates): codeberg.org/small-tech/auto-e

    • Auto Encrypt Localhost (automatic localhost TLS certificates): codeberg.org/small-tech/auto-e

    • @small-tech/https (drop-in Node.js https module replacement with automatic TLS certs everywhere): codeberg.org/small-tech/https

    • JSDB: In-process, in-memory JavaScript database that persists to append-only JavaScript logs: codeberg.org/small-tech/jsdb

    As Site.js reached an evolutionary dead-end, and as I learned from my experiements with replicated data types that replicated data types are *not* a prerequisite for a decentralised web (actual topological decentralisation and ease of use are), I started writing a new server/platform called Kitten from scratch while still making use of the tried and tested modules listed above.

    Last week, I switched over our last site using Site.js to Kitten and, with that, today I’ve sunset³ Site.js:

    sitejs.org

    For its successor, please see Kitten:

    kitten.small-web.org

    If you want to support our work at the Small Technology Foundation, please consider becoming a patron:

    small-tech.org/fund-us

    :kitten:💕

    ¹ ar.al/2024/06/24/small-web-com
    ² ar.al/2019/08/26/introducing-s
    ³ Using our instance of Look Over There!: look-over-there.small-web.org

    #SiteJS #SmallWeb #SmallTech #peerToPeerWeb #SmallTechnologyFoundation #AutoEncrypt #AutoEncryptLocalhost #JSDB #JavaScriptDatabase #https #TLS

  8. So I guess Let’s Encrypt has decided what I’ll be working on today then…

    letsencrypt.org/2024/12/05/end

    (They’re ending OCSP stapling support. I’ll be updating Auto Encrypt¹ to remove OCSP support and then update @small-tech/https, which uses it, along with Auto Encrypt Localhost² to provide seamless TLS support regardless of whether you’re working in development or in production, and then update Site.js³ – deprecated but still used to serve some of our own sites at Small Technology Foundation⁴ – and Kitten⁵, with the latest @small-tech/https.)

    ¹ codeberg.org/small-tech/auto-e
    ² codeberg.org/small-tech/auto-e
    ³ codeberg.org/small-tech/https
    small-tech.org
    kitten.small-web.org

    #SmallWeb #SmallTech #TLS #SSL #HTTPS #LetsEncrypt #OCSP #AutoEncrypt #AutoEncryptLocalhost #SiteJS #Kitten

  9. Quick update: the failing tests were apparently because I had my VPN on on macOS (that was creating an additional IPv4 interface that was getting picked up by the tests that check that your server is accessible via a valid TLS certificate from all available local IPs).

    So no patch necessary :)

    #AutoEncryptLocalhost #https #mkcert #certutil #JavaScript #js #nodeJS #macOS

  10. Hey folks, I just released Auto Encrypt Localhost* v8.4.0 with better async support and updated dependencies.

    npmjs.com/package/@small-tech/

    * My pure JavaScript module (no mkcert, certutil, etc., required) that automatically provisions and installs locally-trusted TLS certificates for Node.js https servers.

    (There seems to be an issue with tests failing on macOS, will debug that tomorrow and likely post a patch release.)

    #AutoEncryptLocalhost #https #mkcert #certutil #JavaScript #js #nodeJS