1
0
Fork 0
forked from mirrors/akkoma

fix mix typo in README.md

$ mix phx.serve
** (Mix) The task "phx.serve" could not be found. Did you mean "phx.server"?

$ mix phx.server
[info] Running Pleroma.Web.Endpoint with Cowboy using http://0.0.0.0:4000
This commit is contained in:
Partial name 2017-11-25 02:42:39 +00:00
parent 44f7154fb9
commit f86fca682a

View file

@ -35,7 +35,7 @@ No release has been made yet, but several servers have been online for months al
* Run `mix ecto.migrate` to run the database migrations. You will have to do this again after certain updates. * Run `mix ecto.migrate` to run the database migrations. You will have to do this again after certain updates.
* You can check if your instance is configured correctly by running it with `mix phx.serve` and checking the instance info endpoint at `/api/v1/instance`. If it shows your uri, name and email correctly, you are configured correctly. If it shows something like `localhost:4000`, your configuration is probably wrong, unless you are running a local development setup. * You can check if your instance is configured correctly by running it with `mix phx.server` and checking the instance info endpoint at `/api/v1/instance`. If it shows your uri, name and email correctly, you are configured correctly. If it shows something like `localhost:4000`, your configuration is probably wrong, unless you are running a local development setup.
* The common and convenient way for adding HTTPS is by using Nginx as a reverse proxy. You can look at example Nginx configuration in `installation/pleroma.nginx`. If you need TLS/SSL certificates for HTTPS, you can look get some for free with letsencrypt: https://letsencrypt.org/ * The common and convenient way for adding HTTPS is by using Nginx as a reverse proxy. You can look at example Nginx configuration in `installation/pleroma.nginx`. If you need TLS/SSL certificates for HTTPS, you can look get some for free with letsencrypt: https://letsencrypt.org/
On Debian you can use `certbot` package and command to manage letsencrypt certificates. On Debian you can use `certbot` package and command to manage letsencrypt certificates.