2 releases
new 0.1.1 | Feb 9, 2025 |
---|---|
0.1.0 | Feb 6, 2025 |
#46 in HTTP server
119 downloads per month
49KB
972 lines
MRPS — mini reverse proxy server.
Features
- CORS
- HTTPS
- Safe rust
- Static file server
- Optional configuration file can be written in JSON or TOML
- Additional minijinja templates with custom functions
- No panics after startup (every panic is a bug)
- Good debugging experience (server displays requests and error messages in human-readable templates)
MiniJinja templates
- Reverse proxy
- Execute commands in the template
- Send HTTP requests in the template
- Parse and format to JSON, TOML and FormData
- Read, write and remove files from the filesystem
- Modify the response headers and status in the template
Docs
config
Command line arguments take priority over the configuration file if are both present.
Command line argument paths are relative to the current working directory.
config
paths are relative to your directory.
When making changes to config
, the server must be restarted.
port: integer?
Optional integer port number on which the server will run, default: 3000
all: bool
Whether to display hidden files.
If confirmed via the command line or the config
file, they will be
displayed.
ignore: [string]?
A list of files to ignore.
glob expressions are used.
If the -i option is passed on the command line, it will be added to the list.
Routes must be considered in relation to the assets folder, not the working directory.
cors: [string]?
Optional array of strings representing allowed origins for CORS requests.
An empty array allows all origins.
If this variable is not defined,CORS will be disabled.
cert: string?
Optional string with the public key file path for the https server.
Only if the cert
and key
are available will the server run over https.
key: string?
Optional string containing the path to the private key file for the https server.
Only if the cert
and key
are available will the server run over https.
assets: string?
Optional string with the static files folder path.
templates: string?
Optional string with the path to the minijinja templates folder.
data: string?
Optional string with the path where templates can read
, write
and remove
files. If not passed, these functions will be unavailable to templates.
routes: [{method, path, template}]
Optional array of objects that define routes:
method
string: one of the http methods:- GET
- POST
- DELETE
- PUT
- PATCH
- HEAD
- OPTIONS
- TRACE
- CONNECT
path
string: path associated with the route,:var
is acceptable for setting path variables (i.e: /api/user/:id).template
string: path to the template associated with this route in thetemplates
folder.
Template variables
method: string
method
associated with this route
.
It is useful when the same template is used in many routes
.
url: string
It is the junction of the path
and the route
query
.
http://localhost:3000/api/users?name=john#me => /api/users?name=john
route: string
It is the route
as declared in the config
file.
/api/user/:id
path: string
Associated path
passed by the client in the request.
http://localhost:3000/api/users?name=john => /api/users
query: string?
Associated query
string passed by the client in the request.
http://localhost:3000/api/users?name=john => name=john
params: {name: value}
Associated object of the path
params
associated with the client request on a given route
.
name
string: name of the parameter as declared in theroute
.value
string: value of the parameter passed in thepath
.
/api/user/:id => http://localhost:3000/api/user/25 => {"id": "25"}
vars: {name: value}
Associated object of the query
params associated with the client request.
name
string: The name of the parameter passed in thequery
value
string: The value of the parameter passed in thequery
http://localhost:3000/api/users?name=john => {"name": "john"}
headers: {name: value}
Associated object of the headers passed by the client in the request.
Note that all header keys are in lowercase.
name
string: name of the header passed in the requestvalue
string: value of the header passed in the request
Content-Type: text/plain => {"content-type": "text/plain"}
body: binary
Body passed by the client in the request.
Template return state
Variables that, if defined, modify the behavior of the server response.
It only works if they are declared outside the blocks to be returned in the template's global state.
modify {status, headers: {name: value}}
The response body is always the result of the template, and this variable allows you to modify the status code and headers.
status
(integer?): new response status code, if not passed, will use 200 by defaultheaders
({name: value}?): headers that should be changed in the response
An example of a redirect.
{% set modify = {"status": 303, "headers": {"Location": "/new/location"}} %}
proxy {url, method, headers: {name, value}, body}
Uses a proxy instead of the template result.
url
(string): proxy URL, is requiredmethod
(string?): method used for the proxy request (by default, the method passed in the original request)headers
({name: value}?): headers that should be changed in the proxy request (by default, do not change any header)body
(binary?): body of the proxy request (by default, the original body)
A simple proxy that retains the request method, headers, body and path and just directs it to another host.
{% set proxy = {"url": "https://another.host.ip"~url} %}
Custom functions
command (cmd) -> {code, stdout, stdin}
Executes a command passed in the template.
This function does not raise errors, in case of failure it returns the code
999999
, and the error message.
cmd
string: command to be executed by the systemcode
integer: response code, in general zero indicates OK, and a number greater than zero the error codestdout
binary: standard output of the executed commandstderr
binary: error message returned
List files in the current directory on UNIX systems.
{% set res = command("ls -l") %}
{% set output = res.stdout | parse("text") %}
read (file) -> data
Reads the contents of a file, if it does not exist returns None
.
This function does not raise errors, any read error will return None
.
It will only be available if the config
file contains the data
property with the folder that contains the files that can be read and modified.
file
string: path of the file to readdata
binary?: contents of the file orNone
in case of errors
{% set content = read("some/file.json") | parse("json") %}
read (dir: string) -> [{...info}]
This function also works with a directory, which in this case will return an array with information about the files contained in it.
dir
string: if the path passed is a directory
info
accessed
string: last access date (%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S)created
string: creation date (%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S)modified
string: modification date (%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S)is_dir
bool: 'true' if it is a directoryis_file
bool: 'true' if it is a fileis_symlink
bool: 'true' if it is a symbolic linkname
string: entry namelen
u64: size in bytes
{% set content = read("some/dir") %}
{% for entry in content %}
{{entry.name}}
{% endfor %}
write (file, data) -> error
Writes to a file. Create folders for the file if necessary. Always overwrites the contents if they exist.
If an error occurs, it returns the error text, otherwise None
. Thus, it does not cause errors.
Will only be available if the config
file contains a data
property specifying a folder containing files that can be read and modified.
file
string: file pathdata
binary: raw data to be writtenerror
string?: error message orNone
{% set data = "Hello world!" %}
{{write("some/file.txt", data | bytes)}}
remove (entry) -> error
Removes a file or directory recursively.
If an error occurred, the error text will be returned, otherwise None
. Thus, it does not cause errors.
Will only be available if the config
file contains a data
property data
property specifying a folder containing files that can be read and modified.
entry
string: path of the file or directory to be removederror
string?: error message orNone
{{remove("some/dir")}}
{{remove("some/file.txt")}}
{method} (url, body) -> {status, headers, body}
Sends a synchronous request to an external resource.
This function does not raise errors, any error in the request will be returned status
with code 400
and a body
containing an error message.
url
string: URL of the requestbody
binary: body of the requeststatus
integer: HTTP status code of the responseheaders
{name
string:value
string}: response headersbody
binary: response bodymethod
:get
(url) -> {status, headers, body}delete
(url) -> {status, headers, body}head
(url) -> {status, headers, body}options
(url) -> {status, headers, body}post
(url, body) -> {status, headers, body}put
(url, body) -> {status, headers, body}patch
(url, body) -> {status, headers, body}
{% set response = get("https://some/api") %}
{% set data = response.body | parse("json") %}
{% set body = "some data" %}
{% set response = post("https://some/api", body | bytes) %}
{% set message = response.body | parse("text") %}
log (message) -> ()
Prints a message from the template on the terminal.
message
string: content of the message
{{ log("hi!") }}
Custom filters
parse (data, encoding) -> result
Converts the raw data returned by some function into a template variable using the passed encoding.
This function outputs an error
message if an unsupported encoding is used or if decoding fails.
In case of an error, it returns a request with the status
code 500
.
data
binary: raw data returned from some functionencoding
string: encoding to be used when reading the data:result
: value supported by the template with associated data
{% set data = read("some/file.txt") | parse("text") %}
{% set response = get("https://some/api") %}
{% set data = response.body | parse("json") %}
format (data, encoding) -> text
Converts a template variable to a formatted string.
This function raises an error
if an unsupported encoding is used or if the encoding fails.
In case of an error, it returns a request with the status
code 500
.
data
: any template variableencoding
string: type of encoding to be adopted when formatting the text:text
string: text after encoding
{% set data = {"name": "John", "age": 30} %}
{% set text = data | format("form") %}
{{text}}
name=John&age=30
bytes (data) -> raw
Converts text to binary format.
data
string: any textraw
binary: text converted to binary
{% set error = write('hello.txt', 'Hello World!' | bytes) %}
{% set response = post('http://ip/some/api', 'Hello World!' | bytes) %}
Dependencies
A huge thank you to everyone who contributed to these projects.
Dependencies
~17–29MB
~445K SLoC