diff --git a/docs/tutorials/tab-nginx/Windows.md b/docs/tutorials/tab-nginx/Windows.md index d756052..67aaaf9 100644 --- a/docs/tutorials/tab-nginx/Windows.md +++ b/docs/tutorials/tab-nginx/Windows.md @@ -1,8 +1,8 @@ ### Using a Self-Signed Certificate and Nginx on Windows without Docker -For basic internal/development installations, you can use nginx and a self-signed certificate to proxy openwebui to https, allowing use of features such as microphone input over LAN. (By default, most browsers will not allow microphone input on insecure non-localhost urls) +For basic internal/development installations, you can use nginx and a self-signed certificate to proxy Open WebUI to https, allowing use of features such as microphone input over LAN. (By default, most browsers will not allow microphone input on insecure non-localhost urls) -This guide assumes you installed openwebui using pip and are running `open-webui serve` +This guide assumes you installed Open WebUI using pip and are running `open-webui serve` #### Step 1: Installing openssl for certificate generation @@ -46,7 +46,7 @@ Move the generated nginx.key and nginx.crt files to a folder of your choice, or Open C:\nginx\conf\nginx.conf in a text editor -If you want openwebui to be accessible over your local LAN, be sure to note your LAN ip address using `ipconfig` e.g. 192.168.1.15 +If you want Open WebUI to be accessible over your local LAN, be sure to note your LAN ip address using `ipconfig` e.g. 192.168.1.15 Set it up as follows: @@ -145,4 +145,4 @@ Run nginx by running `nginx`. If an nginx service is already started, you can re --- -You should now be able to access openwebui on https://192.168.1.15 (or your own LAN ip as appropriate). Be sure to allow windows firewall access as needed. \ No newline at end of file +You should now be able to access Open WebUI on https://192.168.1.15 (or your own LAN ip as appropriate). Be sure to allow windows firewall access as needed.