Taken from https://forums.raspberrypi.com/viewtopic.php?t=216026
On /etc/network/interfaces
add these lines
iface lo inet6 manual
iface eth0 inet6 manual
iface wlan0 inet6 manual
on /etc/sysctl.conf
add/change
Taken from https://forums.raspberrypi.com/viewtopic.php?t=216026
On /etc/network/interfaces
add these lines
iface lo inet6 manual
iface eth0 inet6 manual
iface wlan0 inet6 manual
on /etc/sysctl.conf
add/change
# if click on table get text | |
document.querySelectorAll("#ccTableCollapse td").forEach(function(company) { | |
company.onclick = function(){alert(this.textContent);}; | |
}) |
If like me you are, among other many tasks, a system administrator of a website hosted on OS X server, chances are your are not fully comfortable with what to do precisely in order to get your website running with a valid SSL certificate. After some struggle, I would like to share my experience on the installation of let’s encrypt certificate.
The target audience of this article is people with a minimum IT skills (I assume you know how to open the terminal and some basic knowledge of shell commands), already having a configured and running website hosted on OS X and managed with the Server App. Also this article assumes you will generate the certificate on the machine hosting the server itself.
Note: The following procedure was successfully installed on two similar server, both are Mac mini running on OS X Mavericks (10