summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
path: root/doc/magnet.txt
blob: 0559174f7ad69507895d809baa0016e0fd9591a6 (plain)
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
100
101
102
103
104
105
106
107
108
109
110
111
112
113
114
115
116
117
118
119
120
121
122
123
124
125
126
127
128
129
130
131
132
133
134
135
136
137
138
139
140
141
142
143
144
145
146
147
148
149
150
151
152
153
154
155
156
157
158
159
160
161
162
163
164
165
166
167
168
169
170
171
172
173
174
175
176
177
178
179
180
181
182
183
184
185
186
187
188
189
190
191
192
193
194
195
196
197
198
199
200
201
202
203
204
205
206
207
208
209
210
211
212
213
214
215
216
217
218
219
220
221
222
223
224
225
226
227
228
229
230
231
232
233
234
235
236
237
238
239
240
241
242
243
244
245
246
247
248
249
250
251
252
253
254
255
256
257
258
259
260
261
262
263
264
265
266
267
268
269
270
271
272
273
274
275
276
277
278
279
280
281
282
283
284
285
286
287
288
289
290
291
292
293
294
295
296
297
298
299
300
301
302
303
304
305
306
307
308
309
310
311
312
313
314
315
316
317
318
319
320
321
322
323
324
325
326
327
328
329
330
331
332
333
334
335
336
337
338
339
340
341
342
343
344
345
346
347
348
349
350
351
352
353
354
355
356
357
358
359
360
361
362
363
364
365
366
367
368
369
370
371
372
373
374
375
376
377
378
379
380
381
382
383
384
385
386
387
388
389
390
391
392
393
394
395
396
397
398
399
400
401
402
403
404
405
406
407
408
409
410
411
412
413
414
415
416
417
418
419
420
421
422
423
424
425
426
427
428
429
{{{
#!rst
==============
a power-magnet
==============

------------------
Module: mod_magnet
------------------



.. contents:: Table of Contents

Requirements
============

:Version: lighttpd 1.4.12 or higher
:Packages: lua >= 5.1

Overview
========

mod_magnet is a module to control the request handling in lighty. 

.. note::

  Keep in mind that the magnet is executed in the core of lighty. EVERY long-running operation is blocking 
  ALL connections in the server. You are warned. For time-consuming or blocking scripts use mod_fastcgi and friends.

For performance reasons mod_magnet caches the compiled script. For each script-run the script itself is checked for 
freshness and recompile if neccesary.


Installation
============

mod_magnet needs a lighty which is compiled with the lua-support ( --with-lua). Lua 5.1 or higher are required by
the module. Use "--with-lua=lua5.1" to install on Debian and friends. ::

  server.modules = ( ..., "mod_magnet", ... )

Options
=======

mod_magnet can attract a request in several stages in the request-handling. 

* either at the same level as mod_rewrite, before any parsing of the URL is done
* or at a later stage, when the doc-root is known and the physical-path is already setup

It depends on the purpose of the script which stage you want to intercept. Usually you want to use
the 2nd stage where the physical-path which relates to your request is known. At this level you
can run checks against lighty.env["physical.path"].

::

  magnet.attract-raw-url-to = ( ... )
  magnet.attract-physical-path-to = ( ... )

You can define multiple scripts when separated by a semicolon. The scripts are executed in the specified 
order. If one of them a returning a status-code, the following scripts will not be executed.

Tables
======

Most of the interaction between between mod_magnet and lighty is done through tables. Tables in lua are hashes (Perl), dictionaries (Java), arrays (PHP), ...

Request-Environment
-------------------

Lighttpd has its internal variables which are exported as read/write to the magnet. 

If "http://example.org/search.php?q=lighty" is requested this results in a request like ::

  GET /search.php?q=lighty HTTP/1.1
  Host: example.org

When you are using ``attract-raw-url-to`` you can access the following variables:

* parts of the request-line

 * lighty.env["request.uri"] = "/search.php?q=lighty"

* HTTP request-headers

  * lighty.request["Host"] = "example.org"

Later in the request-handling, the URL is splitted, cleaned up and turned into a physical path name:

* parts of the URI

 * lighty.env["uri.path"] = "/search.php"
 * lighty.env["uri.path-raw"] = "/search.php"
 * lighty.env["uri.scheme"] = "http"
 * lighty.env["uri.authority"] = "example.org"
 * lighty.env["uri.query"] = "q=lighty"

* filenames, pathnames

 * lighty.env["physical.path"] = "/my-docroot/search.php"
 * lighty.env["physical.rel-path"] = "/search.php"
 * lighty.env["physical.doc-root"] = "/my-docroot"

All of them are readable, not all of the are writable (or don't have an effect if you write to them). 

As a start, you might want to use those variables for writing: ::

  -- 1. simple rewriting is done via the request.uri
  lighty.env["request.uri"] = ... 
  return lighty.RESTART_REQUEST

  -- 2. changing the physical-path
  lighty.env["physical.path"] = ...

  -- 3. changing the query-string
  lighty.env["uri.query"] = ...

Response Headers
----------------

If you want to set a response header for your request, you can add a field to the lighty.header[] table: ::

  lighty.header["Content-Type"] = "text/html"

Sending Content
===============

You can generate your own content and send it out to the clients. ::

  lighty.content = { "<pre>", { filename = "/etc/passwd" }, "</pre>" }
  lighty.header["Content-Type"] = "text/html"

  return 200

The lighty.content[] table is executed when the script is finished. The elements of the array are processed left to right and the elements can either be a string or a table. Strings are included AS IS into the output of the request.

* Strings

  * are included as is

* Tables

  * filename = "<absolute-path>" is required
  * offset = <number> [default: 0]
  * length = <number> [default: size of the file - offset]

Internally lighty will use the sendfile() call to send out the static files at full speed.

Status Codes
============

You might have seen it already in other examples: In case you are handling the request completly in the magnet you
can return your own status-codes. Examples are: Redirected, Input Validation, ... ::

  if (lighty.env["uri.scheme"] == "http") then
    lighty.header["Location"] = "https://" .. lighty.env["uri.authority"] .. lighty.env["request.uri"]
    return 302
  end

You every number above and equal to 100 is taken as final status code and finishes the request. No other modules are 
executed after this return.

A special return-code is lighty.RESTART_REQUEST (currently equal to 99) which is usually used in combination with 
changing the request.uri in a rewrite. It restarts the splitting of the request-uri again.

If you return nothing (or nil) the request-handling just continues.

Debugging
=========

To easy debugging we overloaded the print()-function in lua and redirect the output of print() to the error-log. ::

  print("Host: " .. lighty.request["Host"])
  print("Request-URI: " .. lighty.env["request.uri"])


Examples
========

Sending text-files as HTML
--------------------------

This is a bit simplistic, but it illustrates the idea: Take a text-file and cover it in a <pre> tag.

Config-file ::

  magnet.attract-physical-path-to = server.docroot + "/readme.lua"

readme.lua ::

  lighty.content = { "<pre>", { filename = "/README" }, "</pre>" }
  lighty.header["Content-Type"] = "text/html"
  
  return 200

Maintainance pages
------------------

Your side might be on maintainance from time to time. Instead of shutting down the server confusing all
users, you can just send a maintainance page.

Config-file ::

  magnet.attract-physical-path-to = server.docroot + "/maintainance.lua"

maintainance.lua ::

  require "lfs"

  if (nil == lfs.attributes(lighty.env["physical.doc-root"] .. "/maintainance.html")) then
    lighty.content = ( lighty.env["physical.doc-root"] .. "/maintainance.html" )

    lighty.header["Content-Type"] = "text/html"

    return 200
  end

mod_flv_streaming
-----------------

Config-file ::

  magnet.attract-physical-path-to = server.docroot + "/flv-streaming.lua"

flv-streaming.lua::

  if (lighty.env["uri.query"]) then
    -- split the query-string
    get = {}
    for k, v in string.gmatch(lighty.env["uri.query"], "(%w+)=(%w+)") do
      get[k] = v
    end

    if (get["start"]) then
      -- missing: check if start is numeric and positive

      -- send te FLV header + a seek into the file
      lighty.content = { "FLV\x1\x1\0\0\0\x9\0\0\0\x9", 
         { filename = lighty.env["physical.path"], offset = get["start"] } }
      lighty.header["Content-Type"] = "video/x-flv"

      return 200
    end
  end

  
selecting a random file from a directory
----------------------------------------

Say, you want to send a random file (ad-content) from a directory. 

To simplify the code and to improve the performance we define:

* all images have the same format (e.g. image/png)
* all images use increasing numbers starting from 1
* a special index-file names the highest number

Config ::

  server.modules += ( "mod_magnet" )
  magnet.attract-physical-path-to = "random.lua"

random.lua ::

  dir = lighty.env["physical.path"]

  f = assert(io.open(dir .. "/index", "r"))
  maxndx = f:read("*all")
  f:close()

  ndx = math.random(maxndx)

  lighty.content = { { filename = dir .. "/" .. ndx }}
  lighty.header["Content-Type"] = "image/png"

  return 200

denying illegal character sequences in the URL
----------------------------------------------

Instead of implementing mod_security, you might just want to apply filters on the content
and deny special sequences that look like SQL injection. 

A common injection is using UNION to extend a query with another SELECT query.

::

  if (string.find(lighty.env["request.uri"], "UNION%s")) then
    return 400
  end

Traffic Quotas
--------------

If you only allow your virtual hosts a certain amount for traffic each month and want to 
disable them if the traffic is reached, perhaps this helps: ::

  host_blacklist = { ["www.example.org"] = 0 }

  if (host_blacklist[lighty.request["Host"]]) then
    return 404
  end

Just add the hosts you want to blacklist into the blacklist table in the shown way.

Complex rewrites
----------------

If you want to implement caching on your document-root and only want to regenerate 
content if the requested file doesn't exist, you can attract the physical.path: ::

  magnet.attract-physical-path-to = ( server.document-root + "/rewrite.lua" )

rewrite.lua ::

  require "lfs"

  attr = lfs.attributes(lighty.env["physical.path"])

  if (not attr) then
    -- we couldn't stat() the file for some reason
    -- let the backend generate it

    lighty.env["uri.path"] = "/dispatch.fcgi"
    lighty.env["physical.rel-path"] = lighty.env["uri.path"]
    lighty.env["physical.path"] = lighty.env["physical.doc-root"] .. lighty.env["physical.rel-path"]
  fi

luafilesystem
+++++++++++++

We are requiring the lua-module 'lfs' (http://www.keplerproject.org/luafilesystem/). 

I had to compile lfs myself for lua-5.1 which required a minor patch as compat-5.1 is not needed::

  $ wget http://luaforge.net/frs/download.php/1487/luafilesystem-1.2.tar.gz
  $ wget http://www.lighttpd.net/download/luafilesystem-1.2-lua51.diff
  $ gzip -cd luafilesystem-1.2.tar.gz | tar xf -
  $ cd luafilesystem-1.2
  $ patch -ls -p1 < ../luafilesystem-1.2-lua51.diff
  $ make install

It will install lfs.so into /usr/lib/lua/5.1/ which is where lua expects the extensions on my system.

SuSE and Gentoo are known to have their own lfs packages and don't require a compile.

Usertracking
------------

... or how to store data globally in the script-context:

Each script has its own script-context. When the script is started it only contains the lua-functions
and the special lighty.* name-space. If you want to save data between script runs, you can use the global-script
context:

::

  if (nil == _G["usertrack"]) then
    _G["usertrack"] = {}
  end
  if (nil == _G["usertrack"][lighty.request["Cookie"]]) then
    _G["usertrack"][lighty.request["Cookie"]]
  else 
    _G["usertrack"][lighty.request["Cookie"]] = _G["usertrack"][lighty.request["Cookie"]] + 1
  end

  print _G["usertrack"][lighty.request["Cookie"]]

The global-context is per script. If you update the script without restarting the server, the context will still be maintained.

Counters
--------

mod_status support a global statistics page and mod_magnet allows to add and update values in the status page:

Config ::

  status.statistics-url = "/server-counters"
  magnet.attract-raw-url-to = server.docroot + "/counter.lua"

counter.lua ::

  lighty.status["core.connections"] = lighty.status["core.connections"] + 1

Result::

  core.connections: 7
  fastcgi.backend.php-foo.0.connected: 0
  fastcgi.backend.php-foo.0.died: 0
  fastcgi.backend.php-foo.0.disabled: 0
  fastcgi.backend.php-foo.0.load: 0
  fastcgi.backend.php-foo.0.overloaded: 0
  fastcgi.backend.php-foo.1.connected: 0
  fastcgi.backend.php-foo.1.died: 0
  fastcgi.backend.php-foo.1.disabled: 0
  fastcgi.backend.php-foo.1.load: 0
  fastcgi.backend.php-foo.1.overloaded: 0
  fastcgi.backend.php-foo.load: 0

Porting mod_cml scripts
-----------------------

mod_cml got replaced by mod_magnet.

A CACHE_HIT in mod_cml::
 
  output_include = { "file1", "file2" } 

  return CACHE_HIT

becomes::

  content = { { filename = "/path/to/file1" }, { filename = "/path/to/file2"} }

  return 200

while a CACHE_MISS like (CML) ::

  trigger_handler = "/index.php"

  return CACHE_MISS

becomes (magnet) ::

  lighty.env["request.uri"] = "/index.php"

  return lighty.RESTART_REQUEST

}}}