Hi All, Thanks for all your inputs. After looking at all these options, we are planning to use our proprietary https server with modifications.
Thanks, Manoj On Dec 31, 2007 8:41 PM, Saifi Khan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > On Fri, 14 Dec 2007, K V Manoj Kumar wrote: > > > Date: Fri, 14 Dec 2007 11:18:01 +0530 > > From: K V Manoj Kumar <[EMAIL PROTECTED] <kvmanoj%40gmail.com>> > > Reply-To: <[email protected] <twincling%40yahoogroups.com>> > > To: <[email protected] <twincling%40yahoogroups.com>> > > Subject: [twincling] Re: Open Source Https Server > > > > > Adding some more requirements: > > > > 1) Code must be In C++ (OOP support) > > > > Thanks, > > Manoj > > > > On Dec 14, 2007 11:03 AM, K V Manoj Kumar <[EMAIL > > PROTECTED]<kvmanoj%40gmail.com>> > wrote: > > > > > Hi, > > > > > > We are working on a project which requires a light weight HTTPS server > > > which has good platforms coverage and ofcourse Open Source. > > > > > > If anyone has any inputs on this, please let me know. > > > > > > Thanks, > > > Manoj > > > > Hi Manoj: > > Please see the posting by Navneet, wherein he suggested micro_httpd > http://tech.groups.yahoo.com/group/twincling/message/3660 > > The webserver is coded in 'C' and not C++. > > However, the code is clean, well-written and compiles with g++ compiler > without any issues. > > As a modification to the supplied Makefile with the source code, you don't > really need to link the object module with -lnsl and -lsocket. > > A straight forward compile g++ -o webserver micro_httpd.c > works fine. > > In case you want make any calls to the web server code, just introduce > a header file with declaration of the various C functions wrapped in a > extern "C" specification. That should work. > > Please share your thoughts. > > thanks > Saifi. > > >

