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1 | dirplex(1) |
2 | ========== | |
3 | ||
4 | NAME | |
5 | ---- | |
6 | dirplex - Physical directory handler for ashd(7) | |
7 | ||
8 | SYNOPSIS | |
9 | -------- | |
10 | *dirplex* [*-hN*] [*-c* 'CONFIG'] 'DIR' | |
11 | ||
12 | DESCRIPTION | |
13 | ----------- | |
14 | ||
15 | The *dirplex* handler maps URLs into physical files or directories, | |
16 | and, having found a matching file or directory, it performs various | |
17 | kinds of pattern-matching against its physical name to determine what | |
18 | handler to call in order to serve the request. The mapping procedure | |
19 | and pattern matching are described below. | |
20 | ||
21 | Having found a handler to serve a file or directory with, *dirplex* | |
22 | adds the `X-Ash-File` header to the request with a path to the | |
23 | physical file, before passing the request on to the handler. | |
24 | ||
25 | *dirplex* is a persistent handler, as defined in *ashd*(7). | |
26 | ||
27 | OPTIONS | |
28 | ------- | |
29 | ||
30 | *-h*:: | |
31 | ||
1406acb5 | 32 | Print a brief help message to standard output and exit. |
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33 | |
34 | *-N*:: | |
35 | ||
36 | Do not read the global configuration file `dirplex.rc`. | |
37 | ||
38 | *-c* 'CONFIG':: | |
39 | ||
40 | Read an extra configuration file. If 'CONFIG' contains any | |
41 | slashes, it is opened by that exact name. Otherwise, it is | |
42 | searched for in the same way as the global configuration file | |
43 | (see CONFIGURATION below). | |
44 | ||
45 | URL-TO-FILE MAPPING | |
46 | ------------------- | |
47 | ||
48 | Mapping URLs into physical files is an iterative procedure, each step | |
49 | looking in one single physical directory, starting with 'DIR'. For | |
50 | each step, a path element is stripped off the beginning of the rest | |
51 | string and examined, the path element being either the leading part of | |
5ba4cb3a FT |
52 | the rest string up until (but not including) the first slash, or the |
53 | entire rest string if it contains no slashes. If the rest string is | |
54 | empty, the directory being examined is considered the result of the | |
55 | mapping. Otherwise, any escape sequences in the path element under | |
56 | consideration are unescaped before examining it. | |
e7e3e593 | 57 | |
b70b2d4f | 58 | If the path element names a directory in the current directory, the |
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59 | procedure continues in that directory, unless there is nothing left of |
60 | the rest string, in which case *dirplex* responds with a HTTP 301 | |
61 | redirect to the same URL, but ending with a slash. Otherwise, the | |
62 | remaining rest string begins with a slash, which is stripped off | |
63 | before continuing. If the path element names a file, that file is | |
64 | considered the result of the mapping (even if the rest string has not | |
65 | been exhausted yet). | |
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66 | |
67 | If the path element does not name anything in the directory under | |
68 | consideration, but contains no dots, then the directory is searched | |
69 | for a file whose name before the first dot matches the path | |
70 | element. If there is such a file, it is considered the result of the | |
71 | mapping. | |
72 | ||
73 | If the result of the mapping procedure is a directory, it is checked | |
74 | for the presence of a filed named by the *index-file* configuration | |
75 | directive (see CONFIGURATION below). If there is such a file, it is | |
76 | considered the final result instead of the directory itself. If the | |
77 | index file name contains no dots and there is no exact match, then, | |
78 | again, the directory is searched for a file whose name before the | |
79 | first dot matches the index file name. | |
80 | ||
b70b2d4f FT |
81 | See also 404 RESPONSES below. |
82 | ||
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83 | CONFIGURATION |
84 | ------------- | |
85 | ||
86 | Configuration in *dirplex* comes from several sources. When *dirplex* | |
87 | starts, unless the *-N* option is given, it tries to find a global | |
88 | configuration file named `dirplex.rc`. It looks in all directories | |
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89 | named by the *PATH* environment variable, appended with |
90 | `../etc/ashd`. For example, then, if *PATH* is | |
91 | `/usr/local/bin:/bin:/usr/bin`, the directories `/usr/local/etc/ashd`, | |
92 | `/etc/ashd` and `/usr/etc/ashd` are searched for `dirplex.rc`, in that | |
93 | order. Only the first file found is used, should there exist several. | |
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94 | |
95 | If the *-c* option is given to *dirplex*, it too specifies a | |
96 | configuration file to load. If the name given contains any slashes, it | |
97 | is opened by that exact name. Otherwise, it is searched for in the | |
98 | same manner as the global configuration file. | |
99 | ||
100 | In addition, all directories traversed by *dirplex* when mapping a URL | |
101 | into a physical file may contain a file called `.htrc`, which may | |
102 | specify extra configuration options for all files in and beneath that | |
103 | directory. | |
104 | ||
105 | `.htrc` files are checked periodically and reread if changed. The | |
106 | global configuration file and any file named by the *-c* option, | |
107 | however, are never reexamined. | |
108 | ||
109 | When using the configuration files for deciding what to do with a | |
110 | found file, they are examined in order of their "distance" from that | |
111 | file. `.htrc` files found in the directory or directories containing | |
112 | the file are considered "closest" to the file under consideration, | |
113 | followed by any configuration file named by the *-c* option, followed | |
114 | by the global configuration file. | |
115 | ||
116 | Each configuration file is a sequence of configuration stanzas, each | |
117 | stanza being an unindented starting line, followed by zero or more | |
118 | indented follow-up lines adding options to the stanza. The starting | |
119 | line of a stanza is referred to as a "configuration directive" | |
120 | below. Each line is a sequence of whitespace-separated words. A word | |
121 | may contain whitespace if such whitespace is escaped, either by | |
122 | enclosing the word in double quotes, or by escaping individual | |
123 | whitespace characters with a preceding backslash. Backslash quoting | |
124 | may also be used to treat double quotes or another backslash literally | |
125 | as part of the word. Empty lines are ignored, and lines whose first | |
126 | character after leading whitespace is a hash character (`#`) are | |
127 | treated as comments and ignored. | |
128 | ||
129 | The follow configuration directives are recognized: | |
130 | ||
aa7e4406 FT |
131 | *include* ['FILENAME'...]:: |
132 | ||
16c2bec3 | 133 | Read the named files and act as if their contents stood in |
aa7e4406 FT |
134 | place of the *include* stanza. A 'FILENAME' may be a glob |
135 | pattern, in which case all matching files are used, sorted by | |
136 | their filenames. If a 'FILENAME' is a relative path, it is | |
137 | treated relative to the directory containing the file from | |
138 | which the *include* stanza was read, even if the inclusion has | |
139 | been nested. Inclusions may be nested to any level. | |
140 | ||
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141 | *index-file* ['FILENAME'...]:: |
142 | ||
143 | The given 'FILENAMEs' are used for finding index files (see | |
144 | URL-TO-FILE MAPPING above). Specifying *index-file* overrides | |
145 | entirely any previous specification in a more distant | |
146 | configuration file, rather than adding to it. Zero 'FILENAMEs' | |
147 | may be given to turn off index file searching completely. The | |
148 | *index-file* directive accepts no follow-up lines. | |
149 | ||
150 | *child* 'NAME':: | |
151 | ||
152 | Declares a named, persistent request handler (see *ashd*(7) | |
153 | for a more detailed description of persistent handlers). It | |
154 | must contain exactly one follow-up line, *exec* 'PROGRAM' | |
155 | ['ARGS'...], specifying the program to execute and the | |
156 | arguments to pass it. If given in a `.htrc` file, the program | |
157 | will be started in the same directory as the `.htrc` file | |
158 | itself. The *child* stanza itself serves as the identity of | |
159 | the forked process -- only one child process will be forked | |
160 | per stanza, and if that child process exits, it will be | |
161 | restarted the next time the stanza would be used. If a `.htrc` | |
162 | file containing *child* stanzas is reloaded, any currently | |
163 | running children are reused for *child* stanzas in the new | |
164 | file with matching names (even if the *exec* line has | |
165 | changed). | |
166 | ||
167 | *fchild* 'NAME':: | |
168 | ||
169 | Declares a named, transient request handler (see *ashd*(7) for | |
16c2bec3 | 170 | a more detailed description of transient handlers). It must |
67223ca4 | 171 | contain exactly one follow-up line, *exec* 'PROGRAM' |
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172 | ['ARGS'...], specifying the program to execute and the |
173 | arguments to pass it. In addition to the specified arguments, | |
174 | the HTTP method, raw URL and the rest string will be appended | |
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175 | as described in *ashd*(7). If given in a `.htrc` file, the |
176 | program will be started in the same directory as the `.htrc` | |
177 | file itself. | |
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178 | |
179 | *match* [*directory*]:: | |
180 | ||
181 | Specifies a filename pattern-matching rule. The | |
182 | pattern-matching procedure and the follow-up lines accepted by | |
183 | this stanza are described below, under MATCHING. | |
184 | ||
185 | *capture* 'HANDLER':: | |
186 | ||
187 | Only meaningful in `.htrc` files. If a *capture* directive is | |
188 | specified, then the URL-to-file mapping procedure as described | |
189 | above is aborted as soon as the directory containing the | |
190 | `.htrc` file is encountered. The request is passed, with any | |
191 | remaining rest string, to the specified 'HANDLER', which must | |
192 | by a named request handler specified either in the same | |
193 | `.htrc` file or elsewhere. The *capture* directive accepts no | |
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194 | follow-up lines. Note that the `X-Ash-File` header is not |
195 | added to requests passed via *capture* directives. | |
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196 | |
197 | MATCHING | |
198 | -------- | |
199 | ||
200 | When a file or directory has been found by the mapping procedure (see | |
201 | URL-TO-FILE MAPPING above), the name of the physical file is examined | |
202 | to determine a request handler to pass the request to. Note that only | |
203 | the physical file name is ever considered; any logical request | |
204 | parameters such as the request URL or the rest string are entirely | |
205 | ignored. | |
206 | ||
207 | To match a file, any *match* stanzas specified by any `.htrc` file or | |
208 | in the global configuration files are searched in order of their | |
209 | "distance" (see CONFIGURATION above) from the actual file. If it is a | |
210 | directory which is being considered, only *match* stanzas with the | |
211 | *directory* parameter are considered; otherwise, if it is a file, only | |
212 | *match* stanzas without the *directory* parameter are considered. | |
213 | ||
214 | A *match* stanza must contain at least one follow-up line specifying | |
215 | match rules. All rules must match for the stanza as a whole to match. | |
216 | The following rules are recognized: | |
217 | ||
218 | *filename* 'PATTERN'...:: | |
219 | ||
220 | Matches if the name of the file under consideration matches | |
221 | any of the 'PATTERNs'. A 'PATTERN' is an ordinary glob | |
222 | pattern, such as `*.php`. See *fnmatch*(3) for more | |
223 | information. | |
224 | ||
225 | *pathname* 'PATTERN'...:: | |
226 | ||
227 | Matches if the entire path (relative as considered from the | |
228 | root directory being served) of the file under consideration | |
229 | matches any of the 'PATTERNs'. A 'PATTERN' is an ordinary glob | |
230 | pattern, except that slashes are not matched by wildcards. See | |
231 | *fnmatch*(3) for more information. | |
232 | ||
233 | *default*:: | |
234 | ||
235 | Matches if and only if no *match* stanza without a *default* | |
16c2bec3 | 236 | rule matches (in any configuration file). |
e7e3e593 | 237 | |
7711283c FT |
238 | *local*:: |
239 | ||
2f942860 FT |
240 | Valid only in `.htrc` files, *local* matches if and only if |
241 | the file under consideration resides in the same directory as | |
242 | the containing `.htrc` file. | |
7711283c | 243 | |
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244 | In addition to the rules, a *match* stanza must contain exactly one |
245 | follow-up line specifying the action to take if it matches. The | |
246 | following actions are recognized: | |
247 | ||
248 | *handler* 'HANDLER':: | |
249 | ||
250 | 'HANDLER' must be a named handler (see CONFIGURATION | |
251 | above). The named handler is searched for not only in the same | |
252 | configuration file as the *match* stanza, but in all | |
253 | configuration files that are valid for the file under | |
254 | consideration, in order of distance. As such, a more deeply | |
255 | nested `.htrc` file may override the specified handler without | |
256 | having to specify any new *match* stanzas. | |
257 | ||
258 | *fork* 'PROGRAM' ['ARGS'...]:: | |
259 | ||
260 | Run a transient handler for this file, as if it were specified | |
261 | by a *fchild* stanza. This action exists mostly for | |
262 | convenience. | |
263 | ||
77a840e5 FT |
264 | A *match* stanza may also contain any number of *set* lines, as |
265 | follows: | |
266 | ||
267 | *set* 'HEADER' 'VALUE':: | |
268 | ||
269 | If the *match* stanza is selected as the match for a file, the | |
270 | named HTTP 'HEADER' in the request is set to 'VALUE' before | |
271 | passing the request on to the specified handler. | |
272 | ||
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273 | 404 RESPONSES |
274 | ------------- | |
275 | ||
16c2bec3 | 276 | A HTTP 404 response is sent to the client if |
b70b2d4f | 277 | |
16c2bec3 FT |
278 | * The mapping procedure fails to find a matching physical file; |
279 | * A path element is encountered during mapping which, after URL | |
280 | unescaping, either begins with a dot or contains slashes; | |
281 | * The mapping procedure finds a file which is neither a directory nor | |
282 | a regular file; | |
283 | * An empty, non-final path element is encountered during mapping; or | |
284 | * The mapping procedure results in a file which is not matched by any | |
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285 | *match* stanza. |
286 | ||
16c2bec3 | 287 | By default, *dirplex* will send a built-in 404 response, but any |
b70b2d4f FT |
288 | `.htrc` file or global configuration may define a request handler |
289 | named `.notfound` to customize the behavior. Note that, unlike | |
290 | successful requests, such a handler will not be passed the | |
291 | `X-Ash-File` header. | |
292 | ||
293 | The built-in `.notfound` handler can also be used in *match* or | |
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294 | *capture* stanzas (for example, to restrict access to certain files or |
295 | directories). | |
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296 | |
297 | EXAMPLES | |
298 | -------- | |
299 | ||
300 | The *sendfile*(1) program can be used to serve HTML files as follows. | |
301 | ||
302 | -------- | |
303 | match | |
304 | filename *.html | |
305 | fork sendfile -c text/html | |
306 | -------- | |
307 | ||
308 | Assuming the PHP CGI interpreter is installed on the system, PHP | |
309 | scripts can be used with the following configuration, using the | |
310 | *callcgi*(1) program. | |
311 | ||
312 | -------- | |
16c2bec3 FT |
313 | # To use plain CGI, which uses more resources per handled request, |
314 | # but less static resources: | |
e7e3e593 FT |
315 | fchild php |
316 | exec callcgi -p php-cgi | |
16c2bec3 FT |
317 | |
318 | # To use FastCGI, which keeps PHP running at all times, but uses less | |
319 | # resources per handled request: | |
320 | child php | |
321 | exec callfcgi multifscgi 5 php-cgi | |
322 | ||
e7e3e593 FT |
323 | match |
324 | filename *.php | |
325 | handler php | |
326 | -------- | |
327 | ||
328 | If there is a directory without an index file, a file listing can be | |
329 | automatically generated by the *htls*(1) program as follows. | |
330 | ||
331 | -------- | |
332 | match directory | |
333 | default | |
334 | fork htls | |
335 | -------- | |
336 | ||
16c2bec3 FT |
337 | The following configuration can be placed in a `.htrc` file in order |
338 | to dedicate the directory containing that file to some external SCGI | |
339 | script engine. Note that *callscgi*, and therefore the script engine | |
340 | itself, is started in the directory itself, so that arbitrary code | |
341 | modules or data files can be put directly in that directory and easily | |
342 | found. | |
e7e3e593 FT |
343 | |
344 | -------- | |
345 | child foo | |
346 | exec callscgi scgi-wsgi -p . foo | |
347 | ||
348 | capture foo | |
349 | -------- | |
350 | ||
351 | AUTHOR | |
352 | ------ | |
353 | Fredrik Tolf <fredrik@dolda2000.com> | |
354 | ||
355 | SEE ALSO | |
356 | -------- | |
357 | *ashd*(7) |