Hi Martin, I personally use a $42/year wildcard certificate from AlphaSSL. https://blog.alejandrocelaya.com/2016/08/16/setup-a-lets-encrypt-certificate-in-a-aws-elastic-load-balancer/ appears to discuss a way of using letsencrypt with an AWS load balancer.
Geoff On Thu, Nov 16, 2017 at 11:03 PM Martin Broerse <martin.broe...@gmail.com> wrote: > Geoff, > > Thanks for this and the article. Do you use Lets Encrypt with this docker > setup somewhere. I would like to read about that. > > - Martin > > On Thu, Nov 16, 2017 at 9:25 PM, Geoffrey Cox <redge...@gmail.com> wrote: > > > Hi! > > > > I just created a command line wrapper called couch-hash-pwd > > <https://github.com/redgeoff/couch-hash-pwd> for couch-pwd-updated that > > allows you to hash a CouchDB password from the command line. > > > > e.g. `$ couch-hash-pwd -p mysecret` outputs something like > > *-pbkdf2-4a52aa4dc97b5d39498b33b1d563ff344ac08e1a, > > 163fcff74d7cf643c2ae0d97f0b458bf,10* > > > > I've also added details to > > Running a CouchDB 2.0 Cluster in Production on AWS with Docker > > <https://hackernoon.com/running-a-couchdb-2-0-cluster- > > in-production-on-aws-with-docker-50f745d4bdbc> > > > > Special thanks to aphixsoftware and zemirco for creating the building > > blocks! > > > > Geoff > > >