OT: SSL certificates

2016-03-07 Thread Gabor Szabo
Hi there, I think it's time to move some of my sites to use https, but as I only had self-signed ssl so far I wonder if you ppl have any recommendation where to get the certificate from and how much should I expect to pay? I have one domain with about 20 subdomains (the translated versions of my

Re: OT: SSL certificates

2016-03-07 Thread Amos Shapira
I too would recommend letsenctlrypt. The only down side is possibly that you have to keep renewing (automatically with a cron job) every three months. Alternatively, www.ssls.com lists very very cheap certs. On 8 Mar 2016 4:49 p.m., "Baruch Siach" wrote: > Hi Gabor, > > On

Re: OT: SSL certificates

2016-03-07 Thread Baruch Siach
Hi Gabor, On Tue, Mar 08, 2016 at 07:05:03AM +0200, Gabor Szabo wrote: > A found plenty of companies offering SSL certificates. One of them > https://www.ssl.com/ > that was recommended by the domain registrar I am using had > $177 / year for the first 3 hostname and then $49 / year for each >

Re: OT: SSL certificates

2016-03-07 Thread Michael Tewner
As far as I know, letsencrypt.org certs are only good for 90 days, and you'll want to have a script automatically renew and replace the cert in the background all the time. I like https://www.namecheap.com , as it helps you find the cheapest between different CA's. CACert is worthy of this

Re: vdsl2 router

2016-03-07 Thread Amos Shapira
What exact model of TP-Link have you got? I have a TP-Link AC1750 ADSL2+ modem router which is great except that OpenWRT doesn't support this specific model's WiFi well (see multiple "Notes" in https://wiki.openwrt.org/toh/tp-link/archer-c5-c7-wdr7500) So I'm half-heartedly on the lookout for

Re: vdsl2 router

2016-03-07 Thread E.S. Rosenberg
re:all 2016-03-08 2:36 GMT+02:00 E.S. Rosenberg : > 2016-03-08 1:45 GMT+02:00 geoffrey mendelson : >> On 3/8/2016 1:07 AM, E.S. Rosenberg wrote: >>> >>> Personally I don't bother with the modem/router supporting OpenWRT, I >>> bought a nice TP-Link

Re: vdsl2 router

2016-03-07 Thread E.S. Rosenberg
Personally I don't bother with the modem/router supporting OpenWRT, I bought a nice TP-Link router which functions as the router of my networks and runs OpenWRT then the provider router/bridge/whatever box is just used as a bridge device and nothing more. There are far less xDSL devices that