👉 Okay, let’s tackle that wonderfully cryptic-sounding monstrosity of a filename – 0080-default.cnf! (…Let me just pause here and acknowledge the sheer weirdness of the naming convention. Seriously, who names a configuration file that sounds like an outdated spy gadget?!)
Basically, 0080-default.cnf is a seriously stubborn, very insistent, almost aggressively polite, pre-unstyled FreeBSD (!) default TLS/SSL certificate configuration block. Let’s unpack that. Here's the breakdown, seasoned with a hefty pinch of bewildered amusement: 0080: This isn't about the number 0080! FreeBSD uses this as an "ordinal suffix. It basically designates the file's position within a directory, and it’s just... there. Nobody knows exactly why they picked that specific number. Probably for the giggle-factor. -default: Right. You guessed, you're probably right. This is your go-⅜ to where FreeBSD attempts to get things done. (I swear I can hear a little voice saying "Hey! What did I do here?!?!?!”.) 0080’s this way. 0090 is the next step of insanity. .cnf: It's, quite simply, a configuration file. FreeBSD, bless its steadfast and somewhat antiquated heart, insists on using a period (.) before the