A Web application in C? It's as easy as:
#include "http.h" void on_request(http_request_s* request) { http_response_s * response = http_response_create(request); // http_response_log_start(response); // logging ? http_response_set_cookie(response, .name = "my_cookie", .value = "data"); http_response_write_header(response, .name = "X-Data", .value = "my data"); http_response_write_body(response, "Hello World!\r\n", 14); http_response_finish(response); } int main(void) { char* public_folder = NULL; // listen on port 3000, any available network binding (NULL ~= 0.0.0.0) http_listen("3000", NULL, .on_request = on_request, .public_folder = public_folder, .log_static = 0); // start the server facil_run(.threads = 16); }
facil.io is a C mini-framework for web applications and includes a fast HTTP and Websocket server, as well as support for custom protocols.
facil.io powers the HTTP/Websockets Ruby Iodine server and it can easily power your application as well.
facil.io provides high performance TCP/IP network services to Linux / BSD (and macOS) by using an evented design and provides an easy solution to the C10K problem.
facil.io prefers a TCP/IP specialized solution over a generic one (although it can be easily adopted for UDP and other approaches).
facil.io includes a number of libraries that work together for a common goal. Some of the libraries (i.e. the thread-pool library defer, the socket library sock and the evented IO core evio) can be used independently while others are designed to work together using a modular approach.
I used this library (including the HTTP server) on Linux, Mac OS X and FreeBSD (I had to edit the makefile for each environment).
The code in this project is heavily commented and the header files could (and probably should) be used for the actual documentation.
However, experience shows that a quick reference guide is immensely helpful and that Doxygen documentation is ... well ... less helpful and harder to navigate (I'll leave it at that for now).
The documentation in this folder includes:
A Getting Started Guide with example for WebApps utilizing the HTTP / Websocket protocols as well as a custom protocol.
The core facil.io API documentation.
This documents the main library API and should be used when writing custom protocols. This API is (mostly) redundant when using the http or websockets protocol extensions.
The http extension API documentation (Please help me write this).
The http protocol extension allows quick access to the HTTP protocol necessary for writing web applications.
Although the libserver API is still accessible, the http_request_s and http_response_s objects and API provide abstractions for the higher level HTTP protocol and should be preferred.
The websockets extension API documentation (Please help me write this).
The websockets protocol extension allows quick access to the HTTP and Websockets protocols necessary for writing real-time web applications.
Although the libserver API is still accessible, the http_request_s, http_response_s and ws_s objects and API provide abstractions for the higher level HTTP and Websocket protocols and should be preferred.
Core documentation that documents the libraries used internally.
The core documentation can be safely ignored by anyone using the facil.io, http or websockets frameworks.
The core libraries include (coming soon):
defer - A simple event-loop with the added functionality of a thread pool and forking support.
sock - A sockets library that resolves common issues such as fd collisions and user land buffer.
evio - an edge triggered kqueue / epoll abstraction / wrapper with an overridable callback design, allowing fast access to these APIs while maintaining portability enhancing ease of use (at the expense of complexity).
Sure, why not. If you can add Solaris or Windows support to evio, that could mean facil.io would become available for use on these platforms as well (as well as the HTTP protocol implementation and all the niceties that implies).
If you encounter any issues, open an issue (or, even better, a pull request with a fix) - that would be great :-)
Hit me up if you want to:
Help me write HPACK / HTTP2 protocol support.
Help me design / write a generic HTTP routing helper library for the http_request_s struct.
If you want to help me write a new SSL/TLS library or have an SSL/TLS solution we can fit into lib-server (as source code).