As discussed in the issue linked below, the template engine needed to be
changed for various reasons. After a long search, it has been decided to
use TinyTemplate since it is the best match so far.
fixes#8
* the former /var/run is depreciated -> using /run
* update rust build scripts sources to use the new path
* update CHANGELOG to reflect the changes
Signed-off-by: Ralf Zerres <ralf.zerres@networkx.de>
Those directories were located in /etc/acmed/, which is not the best
choice. According to the Filesystem Hierarchy Standard, they should be
located in /var/lib/acmed/.
Because systems may have different conventions, those values are now
configuration at build time.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Filesystem_Hierarchy_Standard
`reqwest` is a very good crate, however ACMEd does not require most of
its functionalities. For this job, `attohttpc` is also great and comes
with much less dependencies.
rel #1
The previous HTTP back-end was tightly coupled with the threads, which
was very inconvenient. It is now completely decoupled so a new threading
model may be implemented.
Although the `acme-lib` crate comes very handy when creating a simple
ACME client, a more advanced one may not want to use it. First of all,
`acme-lib` does not support all of the ACME specification, some very
interesting one are not implemented. Also, it does not store the account
public key, which does not allow to revoke certificates.
In addition to those two critical points, I would also add `acme-lib`
has some troubles with its own dependencies: it uses both `openssl` and
`ring`, which is redundant and contribute to inflate the size of the
binary. Some of the dependencies also makes an excessive use of logging:
even if logging is very useful, in some cases it really is too much and
debugging becomes a nightmare.
ref #1