WEBCIT for the Citadel System
- version 7.37
- Copyright (C) 1996-2009 by the authors. Portions written by:
+ Copyright (C) 1996-2010 by the authors. Portions written by:
Art Cancro
Wilfried Goesgens
Several command-line options are also available. Here's the usage for
the "webcit" program:
- webcit [-i ip_addr] [-p http_port] [-s] [-t tracefile]
+ webcit [-i ip_addr] [-p http_port] [-s] [-S cipher_suite] [-t tracefile]
[-c] [-f] [remotehost [remoteport]]
*or*
- webcit [-i ip_addr] [-p http_port] [-s] [-t tracefile]
+ webcit [-i ip_addr] [-p http_port] [-s] [-S cipher_suite] [-t tracefile]
[-c] [-f] uds /your/citadel/directory
Explained:
service. If you want to do both HTTP and HTTPS, you can simply run two
instances of WebCit on two different ports.
+ -> The "-S" option also enables HTTPS, but must be followed by a list of
+ cipher suites you wish to enable. Please see http://openssl.org/docs/apps/ciphers.html
+ for a list of cipher strings.
+
-> The "-f" option tells WebCit that it is allowed to follow the
"X-Forwarded-For:" HTTP headers which may be added if your WebCit service
is sitting behind a front end proxy. This will allow users in your "Who
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WebCit contains support for calendaring and scheduling. In order to use it
-you must have libical v0.26 (or newer) on your system. You must also be
-running a Citadel server with calendaring support. The calendar service will
-be automatically configured and installed if your host system supports it.
+you must have libical v0.26 (or newer) on your system.
WebCit also provides iCalendar format free/busy data for calendar clients.
Unlike with some other servers, there is no need for each user to "publish"