ref: c3ba64f6935322f09b6de5c2285544fd471c605d
dir: /sys/man/8/httpd/
.TH HTTPD 8 .SH NAME httpd, save, imagemap, man2html, webls \- HTTP server .SH SYNOPSIS .B ip/httpd/httpd .RB [ -a .IR srvaddr ] .RB [ -c .I cert .RB [ -C .IR certchain ]] .RB [ -d .IR domain ] .RB [ -n .IR namespace ] .RB [ -w .IR webroot ] .PP .B ip/httpd/save .RB [ -b .IR inbuf ] .RB [ -d .IR domain ] .RB [ -r .IR remoteip ] .RB [ -w .IR webroot ] .RB [ -N .IR netdir ] .I method version uri .RI [ search ] .br .B ip/httpd/imagemap .I ... .br .B ip/httpd/man2html .I ... .br .B ip/httpd/webls .I ... .SH DESCRIPTION .I Httpd serves the .I webroot directory of the file system described by .I namespace (default .BR /lib/namespace.httpd ), using version 1.1 of the HTTP protocol. It announces the service .I srvaddr (default .BR tcp!*!http ), and listens for incoming calls. If an X.509 certificate is supplied with the .B -c option, then the service is instead .BR tcp!*!https . There should already be a factotum holding the corresponding private key. If the specified certificate has been signed by a certificate authority, the .B -C option may be used to specify a file containing a chain of signed certificates. .PP .I Httpd supports only the GET and HEAD methods of the HTTP protocol; some magic programs support POST as well. Persistent connections are supported for HTTP/1.1 or later clients; all connections close after a magic command is executed. The Content-type (default .BR application/octet-stream ) and Content-encoding (default .BR binary ) of a file are determined by looking for suffixes of the file name in .BR /sys/lib/mimetype . .SS Redirection .PP Each requested URI is looked up in a redirection table, read from .BR /sys/lib/httpd.rewrite . Fields are separated by spaces and tabs. Anything following a .L # is ignored. The first field of each line is a URI; the second a replacement path. If a prefix of the URI matches a redirection path, the URI is rewritten using the corresponding replacement path instead of the prefix, and a temporary redirect is sent to the HTTP client. If the replacement path does not specify a server name, and the request has no explicit host, then .I domain is the host name used in the redirection. The prefix can either be a domain root like .B http://system/ (which matches that URL only) or a path like .B /who/rob (which matches that path no matter what the requested server), but not both: .B http://system/who/rob will never match a request. If the first field ends in a slash, this is an exact match; otherwise it is a prefix match. The first field is a literal string, matched against each file prefix of each URL. The most specific, i.e., longest, pattern wins, and is applied once (there is no rescanning), except for the following exceptions. .I Httpd matches only the prefix and not subordinate pages if a replacement is prefixed with .LR > . .I Httpd omits the unmatched part of the original URI from the rewritten URI if the replacement is prefixed with .LR * . This permits many-to-one mappings; for example, to send all references to an old subtree to a single error page. .PP .I Httpd handles replacements prefixed with .L @ internally, treating the request as if it were for the replacement (without the .BR @ ) but not informing the client of the rewritten name. Replacement URLs prefixed with .L = generate a permanent redirection instead of a temporary one. .I Httpd checks to see if this file has changed once every 50 new TCP connections. HTTP 1.1 persistent connection implies many pages may come in one browser connection, so to kick-start .IR httpd , try .IP .EX for(i in `{seq 50}) hget http://www.your-domain.com/ >/dev/null .EE .SS "Access Control" .PP Before opening any file, .I httpd looks for a file in the same directory called .BR .httplogin . If the file exists, the directory is considered locked and the client must specify a user name and password matching a pair in the file. .B .httplogin contains a list of space or newline separated tokens, each possibly delimited by single quotes. The first is a domain name presented to the HTTP client. The rest are pairs of user name and password. Thus, there can be many user name/password pairs valid for a directory. .br .ne 3 .SS "Auxiliaries (magic)" .PP If the requested URI begins with .BI /magic/ server /\f1, .I httpd executes the file .BI /bin/ip/httpd/ server to finish servicing the request. All the auxiliaries take the same arguments. .IR Method and .IR version are those received on the first line of the request. .I Uri is the remaining portion of the requested URI. .I Inbuf contains the rest of the bytes read by the server, and .I netdir is the network directory for the connection. There are routines for processing command arguments, parsing headers, etc. in the httpd library, .BR /sys/src/cmd/ip/httpd/libhttpd.a.$O . See .B httpd.h in that directory and existing magic commands for more details. .PP .I Save writes a line to .BI /usr/web/save/ uri .data and returns the contents of .BI /usr/web/save/ uri .html. Both files must be accessible for the request to succeed. The saved line includes the current time and either the search string from a HEAD or GET or the first line of the body from a POST. It is used to record form submissions. .PP .I Imagemap processes an HTML imagemap query. It looks up the point .I search in the image map file given by .IR uri , and returns a redirection to the appropriate page. The map file defaults to NCSA format. Any entries after a line starting with the word .B #cern are interpreted in CERN format. .PP .I Man2html converts .IR man (6) format manual pages into html. It includes some abilities to search the manuals. .PP .I Webls produces directory listings on the fly, with output in the style of .IR ls (1). .B /sys/lib/webls.allowed and .B /sys/lib/webls.denied contain regular expressions describing what parts of .I httpd's namespace may and may not be listed, respectively. .B Webls.denied is first searched to see if access is by default denied. If so .B webls.allowed is then searched to see if access is explicitly allowed. Thus one can have very general expressions in the denied list (like .BR .* ), yet still allow exceptions. If .B webls.denied does not exist or is unreadable, all accesses are assumed to be denied unless explicitly allowed in .B webls.allowed. .PP Other sites will note that if neither .B webls.denied nor .B webls.allowed exist, any portion of .I httpd's namespace can be listed (however, .I webls will always endeavor to prevent listing of `.' and `..'). If .B webls.allowed exists but .B webls.denied does not, any directory to be listed must be described by a regular expression in .BR webls.allowed . Similarly, if .B webls.denied exists but .B webls.allowed does not, any directory to be listed must .I not be described by a regular expression in .BR webls.denied . If both exist, a directory is listable if either it doesn't appear in .BR webls.denied , or it appears in both .B webls.denied and .BR webls.allowed . In other words, .B webls.allowed overrides .BR webls.denied . If a listing for a directory is requested and access is denied, or another error occurs, a simple error page is returned. .SH EXAMPLES These are all examples of how to use .BR httpd.rewrite . .PP A local redirection: .RS .EX /netlib/c++/idioms/index.html.Z /netlib/c++/idioms/index.html .EE .RE .PP Redirection to another site: .RS .EX /netlib/lapack/lawns =http://netlib.org/lapack/lawns http://inferno.bell-labs.com =http://www.vitanuova.com .EE .RE .PP Root directory for virtual host: .RS .EX http://www.ampl.com /cm/cs/what/ampl .EE .RE .SH FILES .TF /sys/lib/httpd.rewrite .TP .B /sys/lib/mimetype content type description file .TP .B /lib/namespace.httpd default namespace file for httpd .TP .B /sys/lib/httpd.rewrite redirection file .TP .B /sys/lib/webls.allowed regular expressions describing explicitly listable pathnames; overrides .B webls.denied .TP .B /sys/lib/webls.denied regular expressions describing explicitly unlistable pathnames .SH SOURCE .B /sys/src/cmd/ip/httpd .SH "SEE ALSO" .I newns in .IR auth (2), .IR listen (8), .IR rsa (8)