package tiny_httpd

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Minimal HTTP server using good old threads

Install

Dune Dependency

Authors

Maintainers

Sources

v0.11.tar.gz
md5=21af1a39fdc4b139eb56d6f7b8c39863
sha512=07b17c0fdb3ab49e856fe248a0db7d1be974d900822c1b4d28758751ba096c86f24dc72b024ab272c1720370e640ea66f1cab4937b19c47ff66bda7b876ba781

README.md.html

Tiny_httpd

Minimal HTTP server using good old threads, with stream abstractions, simple routing, URL encoding/decoding, and optional compression with camlzip. It also supports server-sent events (w3c)

Free from all forms of ppx, async monads, etc. 🙃

Note: it can be useful to add the jemalloc opam package for long running server, as it does a good job at controlling memory usage.

The basic echo server from src/examples/echo.ml:


module S = Tiny_httpd

let () =
  let server = S.create () in
  (* say hello *)
  S.add_route_handler ~meth:`GET server
    S.Route.(exact "hello" @/ string @/ return)
    (fun name _req -> S.Response.make_string (Ok ("hello " ^name ^"!\n")));
  (* echo request *)
  S.add_route_handler server
    S.Route.(exact "echo" @/ return)
    (fun req -> S.Response.make_string (Ok (Format.asprintf "echo:@ %a@." S.Request.pp req)));
  Printf.printf "listening on http://%s:%d\n%!" (S.addr server) (S.port server);
  match S.run server with
  | Ok () -> ()
  | Error e -> raise e
$ dune exec src/examples/echo.exe &
listening on http://127.0.0.1:8080

# the path "hello/name" greets you.
$ curl -X GET http://localhost:8080/hello/quadrarotaphile
hello quadrarotaphile!

# the path "echo" just prints the request.
$ curl -X GET http://localhost:8080/echo --data "howdy y'all" 
echo:
{meth=GET;
 headers=Host: localhost:8080
         User-Agent: curl/7.66.0
         Accept: */*
         Content-Length: 10
         Content-Type: application/x-www-form-urlencoded;
 path="/echo"; body="howdy y'all"}

http_of_dir

Similar to python -m http.server, a simple program http_of_dir is provided. It serves files from the current directory.

$ http_of_dir . -p 8080 &
$ curl -X GET http://localhost:8080
...
<html list of current dir>
...

Why?

Why not? If you just want a super basic local server (perhaps for exposing data from a local demon, like Cups or Syncthing do), no need for a ton of dependencies or high scalability libraries.

Use cases might include:

  • serve content directly from a static blog generator;

  • provide a web UI to some tool (like CUPS and syncthing do);

  • implement a basic monitoring page for a service;

  • provide a simple json API for a service, on top of http;

  • use http_of_dir to serve odoc-generated docs or some assets directory.

Documentation

See https://c-cube.github.io/tiny_httpd

License

MIT.

OCaml

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