Caddy compatibility for zeroserve: 3x throughput and 70% lower latency
90 points - today at 1:43 PM
SourceComments
1a527dd5 today at 3:07 PM
Anyone else got a really weird Chorme pop-up asking which cert to use for su3.io:443?
Very bizarre, never seen that before.
Thumbprints:
- 60949a09aab8677f87a0b9eda7099a03ca510fb3
- 1b146798f0dc93773247e86312f1b730c4eeebb3tln today at 3:05 PM
No ACME! That is a dealbreaker
https://github.com/losfair/zeroserve/blob/main/CADDY_COMPAT....
codingjoe today at 4:29 PM
"Caddy compatible" minus everything that matters, like ACME and plugins. And NGINX still steals the show. Not everything needs to be rewritten.
augunrik today at 2:45 PM
I am surprised how well nginx holds up?!
smallerize today at 2:51 PM
I still think of eBPF as not being Turing-complete. There is still a complexity limit in the verifier. Even if someone did implement Game of Life by having the program set a timer to run itself. https://isovalent.com/blog/post/ebpf-yes-its-turing-complete...
zsoltkacsandi today at 2:44 PM
From a technical standpoint, these are always impressive projects, but I've always wondered: has anyone ever encountered a use case where the Caddy was the bottleneck?
Thaxll today at 5:34 PM
Another vibe coded, dead in 6 month Rust project.
People that trully need performance are not going to use a random server that has 0 support/ track record.
BoingBoomTschak today at 4:35 PM
Interesting. Trying to get some of the performance advantages of TUX/IIS without as much insecurity makes sense for some big players, I guess.
The usual 3400 lines lock file and AGENTS.md raise some questions about the aforementioned security, though.
dshat today at 5:21 PM
No thanks
nullstyle today at 2:30 PM
Fudge, I really need to carve out time today to play with zeroserve. Very cool stuff