agate 2.4.0

Very simple server for the Gemini hypertext protocol
agate-2.4.0 is not a library.

Agate

Simple Gemini server for static files

Agate is a server for the Gemini network protocol, built with the Rust programming language. Agate has very few features, and can only serve static files. It uses async I/O, and should be quite efficient even when running on low-end hardware and serving many concurrent requests.

Since Agate by default uses port 1965, you should be able to run other servers (like e.g. Apache or nginx) on the same device.

Learn more

Installation and setup

  1. Download and unpack the pre-compiled binary.

    Or, if you have the Rust toolchain installed, run cargo install agate to install agate from crates.io.

    Or download the source code and run cargo build --release inside the source repository, then find the binary at target/release/agate.

  2. Generate a self-signed TLS certificate and private key. For example, if you have OpenSSL 1.1 installed, you can use a command like the following. (Replace the hostname example.com with the address of your Gemini server.)

openssl req -x509 -newkey rsa:4096 -keyout key.rsa -out cert.pem \
    -days 3650 -nodes -subj "/CN=example.com"
  1. Run the server. You can use the following arguments to specify the locations of the content directory, certificate and key files, IP address and port to listen on, host name to expect in request URLs, and default language code(s) to include in the MIME type for for text/gemini files: (Again replace the hostname example.com with the address of your Gemini server.)
agate --content path/to/content/ \
      --key key.rsa \
      --cert cert.pem \
      --addr :::1965 \
      --addr 0.0.0.0:1965 \
      --hostname example.com \
      --lang en-US

All of the command-line arguments are optional. Run agate --help to see the default values used when arguments are omitted.

When a client requests the URL gemini://example.com/foo/bar, Agate will respond with the file at path/to/content/foo/bar. If any segment of the requested path starts with a dot, agate will respond with a status code 52, wether the file exists or not (this behaviour can be disabled with --serve-secret). If there is a directory at that path, Agate will look for a file named index.gmi inside that directory.

Configuration

Directory listing

You can enable a basic directory listing for a directory by putting a file called .directory-listing-ok in that directory. This does not have an effect on subdirectories. The directory listing will hide files and directories whose name starts with a dot (e.g. the .directory-listing-ok file itself or also the .meta configuration file).

A file called index.gmi will always take precedence over a directory listing.

Meta-Presets

You can put a file called .meta in a directory that stores some metadata about these files which Agate will use when serving these files. The file should be UTF-8 encoded. Like the .directory-listing-ok file, this file does not have an effect on subdirectories. Lines starting with a # are comments and will be ignored like empty lines. All other lines must start with a file name (not a path), followed by a colon and then the metadata.

The metadata can take one of four possible forms:

  1. empty
    Agate will not send a default language parameter, even if it was specified on the command line.
  2. starting with a semicolon followed by MIME parameters
    Agate will append the specified string onto the MIME type, if the file is found.
  3. starting with a gemini status code (i.e. a digit 1-6 inclusive followed by another digit) and a space
    Agate will send the metadata wether the file exists or not. The file will not be sent or accessed.
  4. a MIME type, may include parameters
    Agate will use this MIME type instead of what it would guess, if the file is found. The default language parameter will not be used, even if it was specified on the command line.

If a line violates the format or looks like case 3, but is incorrect, it might be ignored. You should check your logs. Please know that this configuration file is first read when a file from the respective directory is accessed. So no log messages after startup does not mean the .meta file is okay.

Such a configuration file might look like this:

# This line will be ignored.
index.gmi:;lang=en-UK
LICENSE:text/plain;charset=UTF-8
gone.gmi:52 This file is no longer here, sorry.

Logging Verbosity

Agate uses the env_logger crate and allows you to set the logging verbosity by setting the default RUST_LOG environment variable. For more information, please see the documentation of env_logger.