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Omar Polo 09a1b97896
put back the missing lseek, and change variables name
(I know, changing variables names AND introducing changes is better
done in more commits, but…)

Added back an lseek that was missing.  If TLS_WANT_POLL{IN,OUT}, we
need to re-send that block, but we need also to rewind the file, in
order to read(2) that chunk again.  This doesn’t solve the corruption
in transferring big files, but reduces them.  I still haven’t tracked
down the corruption :/
2020-10-07 17:59:31 +02:00
.gitignore initial commit 2020-10-02 19:39:00 +02:00
gmid.1 minor documentation edits 2020-10-03 17:49:09 +02:00
gmid.c put back the missing lseek, and change variables name 2020-10-07 17:59:31 +02:00
INSTALL.gmi extend installation notes 2020-10-03 14:13:55 +02:00
LICENSE added license 2020-10-02 19:54:59 +02:00
Makefile fixed quoting in Makefile 2020-10-02 19:46:46 +02:00
README.md minor documentation edits 2020-10-03 17:49:09 +02:00

NAME

gmid - dead simple zero configuration gemini server

SYNOPSIS

gmid

**-h**]
\[**-c** *cert.pem*]
\[**-d** *docs*]
\[**-k** *key.pem*]

# DESCRIPTION

**gmid**
is a very simple and minimal gemini server.
It only supports serving static content, and strive to be as simple as
possible.

**gmid**
will strip any sequence of
*../*
or trailing
*..*
in the requests made by clients, so it's impossible to serve content
outside the
*docs*
directory by mistake, and will also refuse to follow symlink.
Furthermore, on
OpenBSD,
pledge(2)
and
unveil(2)
are used to ensure that
**gmid**
dosen't do anything else than read files from the given directory and
accept network connections.

It should be noted that
**gmid**
is very simple in its implementation, and so it may not be appropriate
for serving site with lots of users.
After all, the code is single threaded and use a single process.

If a user request path is a directory,
**gmid**
will try to serve a
*index.gmi*
file inside that directory.
If not found, it will return an error 51 (not found) to the user.

The options are as follows:

**-c** *cert.pem*

> The certificate to use, by default is
> *cert.pem*.

**-d** *docs*

> The root directory to serve.
> **gmid**
> won't serve any file that is outside that directory.

**-h**

> Print the usage and exit.

**-k** *key.pem*

> The key for the certificate, by default is
> *key.pem*.

# EXAMPLES

To quickly getting started

	$ # generate a cert and a key
	$ openssl req -x509 -newkey rsa:4096 -keyout key.pem \
	        -out cert.pem -days 365 -nodes
	$ mkdir docs
	$ cat <<EOF > docs/index.gmi
	# Hello world
	test paragraph...
	EOF
	$ gmid -c cert.pem -k key.pem -d docs

now you can visit gemini://localhost/ with your preferred gemini client.

# CAVEATS

*	it doesn't support virtual hosts: the host part of the request URL is
	completely ignored.

*	it doesn't fork in the background or anything like that.