____ _ _
/ ___| _ __ __ _ ___ ___ ___ ___ ___ | | _(_) ___
\___ \| '_ \ / _` |/ __/ _ \/ __/ _ \ / _ \| |/ / |/ _ \
___) | |_) | (_| | (_| __/ (_| (_) | (_) | <| | __/
|____/| .__/ \__,_|\___\___|\___\___/ \___/|_|\_\_|\___|
|_| – haskell gopher server
What is Gopher?
The Gopher protocol /ˈɡoʊfər/ is a TCP/IP application layer protocol designed for distributing, searching, and retrieving documents over the Internet. The Gopher protocol was strongly oriented towards a menu-document design and presented an alternative to the World Wide Web in its early stages, but ultimately HTTP became the dominant protocol. The Gopher ecosystem is often regarded as the effective predecessor of the World Wide Web.
– WP
What is Spacecookie?
Spacecookie is a gopher server and…
- is RFC1436-compliant
- supports info-line in menus (compatible protocol extension)
- supports gophermaps (see below)
- provides a library for custom gopher applications (see documentation)
- can integrate with systemd using socket activation
Configuration
In order to run your new gopher server, you got to configure it first. The example configuration file is ./etc/spacecookie.json
.
Let's have a quick look at the options:
option |
meaning |
hostname |
The hostname your spacecookie will be reachable through. |
user |
The user that just run spacecookie. It is used to drop root priveleges after binding the server socket. |
port |
The port spacecookie should listen on. The well-known port for gopher is 70. |
root |
The directory which the files to serve via gopher are located in. |
Running
After you've created your config file just start spacecookie like this:
spacecookie /path/to/spacecookie.json
Spacecookie runs as a simple process and doesn't fork or write a PID file.
Therefore you'll need to use a supervisor to run it as a proper daemon.
With systemd
Spacecookie supports systemd socket activation. To set it up you'll need
to install spacecookie.service
and spacecookie.socket
like so:
cp ./etc/spacecookie.{service,socket} /etc/systemd/system/
systemctl daemon-reload
systemctl enable spacecookie.socket
systemctl start spacecookie.socket
systemctl start spacecookie.service # optional, started by the socket automatically if needed
Don't forget to change the paths in the systemd files and match the user name in
spacecookie.socket
with the one in spacecookie.json
!
Without systemd
Spacecookie does not require systemd nor depend on it. Since socket
activation only uses an environment variable and a type unix socket, it
is very lightweight and can be utilized without using a systemd library
or dbus.
Spacecookie currently fully supports any GNU/Linux. It should be pretty
easy to, for example, write a runit service
file.
Adding Content
Spacecookie acts as a simple file server, only excluding files that start with a dot.
It generates gopher menus automatically; however you can use custom ones by adding a gophermap file.
Spacecookie checks for .gophermap
in every directory it serves and, if present, uses the menu specified in there.
Such a file looks like this:
You can just start writing text that
will be displayed by the gopher client
without a link to a file. Empty lines are
also possible.
1Menu Entry for a directory full of funny stuff /funny
iFunny Image /funy.jpg
gcat gif /cat.gif
0about me /about.txt
1Floodgap's gopher server / gopher.floodgap.com 70
So what does that all mean? These are the rules for a gophermap file:
- comment lines (called info lines in spacecookie's code) are just lines of text. They must not contain a tab! They will be displayed as lines of text by the gopher client.
- menu entries for files or directories start with a single char which specifies the file type, followed by the text for that file without a space or tab between them! Then the path is added after a tab.
- "Links" to other servers are like file/directory menu entries but the server's hostname and its port must be added (tab-separated).
The file type characters are defined in RFC1436. Detailed documentation on the gophermap format can be found here.
HTTP Support?
Spacecookie will never support HTTP to keep the code simple and clean. You can
however use an HTTP to Gopher Proxy with Spacecookie just fine. Any proxy
supporting RFC1436 should work, my own gopher-proxy
might work for you.