./security/uacme, Lightweight C ACMEv2 client which uses external authenticators

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Branch: CURRENT, Version: 1.7.5nb5, Package name: uacme-1.7.5nb5, Maintainer: hauke

Lightweight client for the RFC8555 ACMEv2 protocol, written in plain C
with minimal dependencies (libcurl and one of GnuTLS, OpenSSL or mbedTLS).

The ACMEv2 protocol allows a Certificate Authority (Let's Encrypt is a
popular one) and an applicant to automate the process of verification
and certificate issuance. The protocol also provides facilities for
other certificate management functions, such as certificate revocation.



Package options: openssl

Master sites:

Filesize: 252.342 KB

Version history: (Expand)


CVS history: (Expand)


   2024-12-18 17:22:58 by Hauke Fath | Files touched by this commit (1)
Log message:
Attempting to fix the SunOS build -- more defines may be necessary,
though, and I don't have a Solarish machine at hand.
   2024-11-14 23:22:33 by Thomas Klausner | Files touched by this commit (2429)
Log message:
*: recursive bump for icu 76 shlib major version bump
   2024-11-01 13:55:19 by Thomas Klausner | Files touched by this commit (2426)
Log message:
*: revbump for icu downgrade
   2024-11-01 01:54:33 by Thomas Klausner | Files touched by this commit (2427)
Log message:
*: recursive bump for icu 76.1 shlib bump
   2024-10-10 21:31:36 by Nia Alarie | Files touched by this commit (1)
Log message:
uacme: Needs -lsocket on SunOS
   2024-05-29 18:35:19 by Adam Ciarcinski | Files touched by this commit (1929) | Package updated
Log message:
revbump after icu and protobuf updates
   2024-05-16 08:15:47 by Thomas Klausner | Files touched by this commit (692)
Log message:
*: recursive bump for gnutls p11-kit option

(existing installations need the bl3.mk included, but it's now only
optionally included)
   2024-05-02 15:34:56 by Hauke Fath | Files touched by this commit (9)
Log message:
Add security/uacme package.

Lightweight client for the RFC8555 ACMEv2 protocol, written in plain C
with minimal dependencies (libcurl and one of GnuTLS, OpenSSL or mbedTLS).

The ACMEv2 protocol allows a Certificate Authority (Let's Encrypt is a
popular one) and an applicant to automate the process of verification
and certificate issuance.  The protocol also provides facilities for
other certificate management functions, such as certificate revocation.