Probably one of the easiest things you'll ever do with gpg
Install Keybase: https://keybase.io/download and Ensure the keybase cli is in your PATH
First get the public key
keybase pgp export | gpg --import
Next get the private key
Probably one of the easiest things you'll ever do with gpg
Install Keybase: https://keybase.io/download and Ensure the keybase cli is in your PATH
First get the public key
keybase pgp export | gpg --import
Next get the private key
These are my notes basically. At first i created this gist just as a reminder for myself. But feel free to use this for your project as a starting point. If you have questions you can find me on twitter @thomasf https://twitter.com/thomasf This is how i used it on a Debian Wheezy testing (https://www.debian.org/releases/testing/)
Discuss, ask questions, etc. here https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=7445545
Standard practices say no non-root process gets to talk to the Internet on a port less than 1024. How, then, could I get Node talking on port 80 on EC2? (I wanted it to go as fast as possible and use the smallest possible share of my teeny tiny little micro-instance's resources, so proxying through nginx or Apache seemed suboptimal.)
Alter the port the script talks to from 8000 to 80:
}).listen(80);