c23c3a4f53
Not that I think we could break out of the directory since we use basename, but you never know... maybe there's a unicode bug in PHP or something. |
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dot-well-known | ||
README.txt |
Initial simple way to Webfinger enable your domain -- needs PHP. ================================================================ Step 1 ====== Put the 'dot-well-known' on your website, so it loads at: https://example.com/.well-known/ (Remember the . at the beginning of this one, which is common practice for "hidden" files and why we have renamed it "dot-") Step 2 ====== Edit the .well-known/host-meta file and replace "example.com" with the domain name you're hosting the .well-known directory on. Using vim you can do this as a quick method: $ vim .well-known/host-meta [ENTER] :%s/example.com/domain.com/ [ENTER] :wq [ENTER] Step 3 ====== For each user on your site, and this might only be you... In the webfinger directory, make a copy of the example@example.com.xml file so that it's called (replace username and example.com with appropriate values, the domain name should be the same as you're "socialifying"): username@example.com.xml Then edit the file contents, replacing "social.example.com" with your GNU social instance's base path, and change the user ID number (and nickname for the FOAF link) to that of your account on your social site. If you don't know your user ID number, you can see this on your GNU social profile page by looking at the destination URLs in the Feeds links. PROTIP: You can get the bulk of the contents (note the <Subject> element though) from curling down your real webfinger data: $ curl https://social.example.com/.well-known/webfinger?resource=acct:username@social.example.com Finally ======= Using this method, though fiddly, you can now be @user@domain without the need for any prefixes for subdomains, etc.