Mortifis wrote to All <=-
Wanting and/or needing Lets Encrypt on a Slackware 14.2 Linux
system has to be the most brutal approach anyone can imaging ....
I have always enjoyed the hands-on Slackware requires, but
acquiring the prerequisite for various packages is very time
consuming and often results in a broken system ... I am
definitely considering to finally switch my server needs over to
a deb* based system ... so long Slackware, it's been a long 24
years :-/
Have you thought about trying this? (I haven't as I don't
need/use LetsEncrypt):
https://slackbuilds.org/repository/14.2/system/letsencrypt/
You're likely familiar with SBo, and yes.... there are a *LOT* of dependencies listed there. But, they're all available right there
on SBo, probably wouldn't be *TOO* bad to get it done.
Don't give up on Slackware! We need all of us there are left...!
;-) I will say I'm getting tired of waiting for 15.0... been over
three years now since 14.2 was released. Arggghhhh.
Mortifis wrote to Dan Clough <=-
Don't give up on Slackware! We need all of us there are left...!
;-) I will say I'm getting tired of waiting for 15.0... been over
three years now since 14.2 was released. Arggghhhh.
Sadly, I did give up on Slackware a year ago for an easier update management type OS :/
Slackware is not that hard to manage, really. I mean, if you want automatic dependency resolution, you can use sbotools or something like that. It is not much different to using OpenBSD ports.
*deb distributions work until you try to use a third party deb package that pulls weird dependencies in, or try to do something weird yourself... they are more convenient in principle but if you want to go the Power User route they are very stiff. Dependency hell is a thing.
---
Mortifis wrote to Dan Clough <=-
Don't give up on Slackware! We need all of us there are left...!
;-) I will say I'm getting tired of waiting for 15.0... been over
three years now since 14.2 was released. Arggghhhh.
Sadly, I did give up on Slackware a year ago for an easier update
management type OS :/
Yeah, can't really blame ya... it can be a pain at times. I'm
still with it, and probably will stay. I do play with
Debian/variants on other machines, and that apt stuff sure is nice
for updates... ;-)
I almost installed Slack today... I went with FreeBSD and Arch; but I should dig into Slack... I *REALLY* like FreeBSD for building... and I'm new; this my first Arch box... but MAN!; I like it so far. :P
Slackware is on my radar as I figure out where I wanna live; and build... Sl could be a great building box... and I know you'll tell me it could be a gre daily driver too. :P
woot woot
paulie420 wrote to Gamgee <=-
Don't give up on Slackware! We need all of us there are left...!
;-) I will say I'm getting tired of waiting for 15.0... been over
three years now since 14.2 was released. Arggghhhh.
Sadly, I did give up on Slackware a year ago for an easier update
management type OS :/
Yeah, can't really blame ya... it can be a pain at times. I'm
still with it, and probably will stay. I do play with
Debian/variants on other machines, and that apt stuff sure is nice
for updates... ;-)
Slacks scripting method is one reason why I was *drawn* to it...
the package manager thru scripts isn't all... it has its benefits
too.
Arelor wrote to paulie420 <=-
FreeBSD is nice. It has always felt like a BSD licensed Linux for me
for some reason, so I don't use it much, though.
paulie420 wrote to Gamgee <=-
Slacks scripting method is one reason why I was *drawn* to it...
the package manager thru scripts isn't all... it has its benefits
too.
Yes, I know. Been using it daily for 20+ years. My BBS runs on
it. This message comes from my daily driver laptop running it.
Before Linux was ready for the datacenter, I used BSD/OS and later
FreeBSD for my company's internet presence, and really enjoyed the
environment. Always wanted to load up old-school 4.4BSD on something
to play with...
poindexter FORTRAN wrote to Arelor <=-
FreeBSD is nice. It has always felt like a BSD licensed Linux for me
for some reason, so I don't use it much, though.
Before Linux was ready for the datacenter, I used BSD/OS and
later FreeBSD for my company's internet presence, and really enjoyed
the environment. Always wanted to load up old-school 4.4BSD on
something to play with...
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