546d30b94b
This avoids PATH conflicts with a real httpd, as a user will likely almost always prefer the more fully-featured httpd. This also lines up with the historical name of the program. |
||
---|---|---|
.. | ||
Makefile | ||
README | ||
simple_httpd.c |
Simple_httpd - A small and free Web server "Simple_httpd is like /usr/bin/mail is to mail clients, no frills." This HTTP server can be used in any FreeBSD/PicoBSD application. It has been tested under FreeBSD 2.2.x, 3.x and 4.x. It might work on other OS systems, but it's for FreeBSD primarily. The main advantage to Simple_httpd is that it is very small. The 25K binary can satisfy most needs in a small or embedded appplication. If you want a full featured server see /usr/ports/www/apache* or http://www.apache.org Simple_httpd is released under a BSD style copyright that unlike GPL is embedded developer friendly. The server is designed to be run in one of two modes. The standard mode is a httpd server running in the background serving up a directory of html,gif,cgi whatever. Your traditional www server. The "fetch" mode supports file transfer over httpd. This is best thought of as mate for fetch(1). This feature can be useful to transfer a file from one host to another. Simple_httpd has the ability to run CGI scripts. All CGI scripts must be located in ${DOCUMENT_ROOT}/cgi-bin. The server currently only sets 3 environment variables before calling the script. CGI Environment variables are below: SERVER_SOFTWARE = FreeBSD/PicoBSD REMOTE_HOST = client.canada_lower_taxes.com REMOTE_ADDR = 200.122.13.108 In most target applications for this server the extra DNS traffic from the remote_addr lookup will likely be on the local lan anyway and not on the other side of the internet. You can turn it off yourself in the code if you want to speed the whole process up. Be sure to turn it off for the logfile also. How to use it? ============== Compile with make, run as follows usage: simple_httpd [-vD] [-d directory] [-g grpid] [-l logfile] [-p port] or usage: simple_httpd [-p port] -f filename -v Run the server verbose. Show the program options that will be used for this process. Will only show information during startup, no messages will be displayed while serving requests. In other words you can still daemonize without fear of output on stdout. -D Do not daemonize. The server will not run in the background. It will stay attached to the tty. This is useful for debugging. In this mode no log file is created. Logging info is to stdout. This option is automatically selected if fetch option is selected. -d directory The html document directory, if nothing is provided the default is /httphome if UID is root, otherwise document root is ${HOME}/public_html -l logfile Set the logfile to use. Log messages will be written to /var/log/jhttpd.log if you are root and ${HOME}/jhttpd.log otherwise. If you don't want a log file try "-l /dev/null" -p port Set the port httpd server will listen to. Default is port 80 if you are root and 1080 if you are not. -f filename This is the only option needed to use the "fetch" feature. The file specified will be the ONLY file served to ANY GET request from a browser or fetch(1). Example ======= Standard Mode: -------------- If you have the FreeBSD handbook installed on your machine and would like to serve it up over http for a quick look you could do this simple_httpd -d /usr/share/doc/handbook -l /usr/tmp/jlog.txt -p 1088 -v Any browser would be able to look at the handbook with http://whatever_host/handbook.html:1088 I'm using 1088 as the port since I already have apache running on port 80 and port 1080 on my host. Please note, the handbook is not installed by default in FreeBSD 3.x It must be installed from the ports collection first if you want to try this. Another simple example is to browse your local ports collection: cd /usr/ports make readmes #wait about 1 hour! simple_httpd -p 1080 -v -d /usr/ports Then point your browser at http://whatever_host/README.html Fetch Mode: -------------- This is designed to be used in conjunction with fetch(3). It allows for easy transfer of files from one host to another without messy authentication or pathnames required with ftp. The file to be served up must be readable by the user running simple_httpd. This is not a magic way to avoid permissions and read files. The daemon will only serve up ONE file. The file specified will be returned for every GET request regardless of what the browser asks for. This allows for on the fly naming. sender# simple_httpd -f /usr/tmp/big_file.tgz receiver# fetch http://sender.com/Industrial_Secrets.tgz big_file.tgz was transferred from one machine to another and renamed Industrial_Secrets.tgz at the same time. Tunneling over other TCP ports. Choose something that firewall will probably pass. See /etc/services. sender# simple_httpd -p 53 -f /usr/tmp/big_file.tgz receiver# fetch http://sender.com:53/Industrial_Secrets.tgz To Do ===== Simple authentication would be very useful [understatment]. /etc/passwd or PAM would be nice. I think a netmask option would be good. Most internet appliances probably want to restrict traffic to local ethernet anyway. ie: Allow anything from my class C. The server always has 1 zombie process hanging around when it runs as a daemon. Should fix so that it doesn't happen. Anything to make it faster! Man page If anyone has any improvements or ways to easily implement something please let me <wlloyd@slap.net> know. If you make some neat embedded device with PicoBSD I want to know too! Credits ======= This program was originally contributed by Marc Nicholas <marc@netstor.com> Major rewrite by William Lloyd <wlloyd@slap.net> $FreeBSD$