For security reasons, the typical boot process of HTTPS servers is as follows: Executed by a root. Reading a TLS private key and open a listen socket on TCP port 443. Switching the root user to nobody (or something). Since accept() can create connected sockets bound to TCP port 443 even with non-root privilege, servers can accept connections. Let's consider the case of QUIC servers which uses UDP.
Yesod is a Haskell web framework for productive development of type-safe, RESTful, high performance web applications. July 27, 2014By Michael SnoymanView source on Github I was stumped by this one myself for a bit today, so I thought writing it up in a blog post would be a good way to make sure (1) I don't forget this little fact, and (2) hopefully the next person doesn't need to puzzle over this
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