httpserv 0.6.1

A tiny, zero-dependency fileserver for local HTML development.
httpserv-0.6.1 is not a library.
Visit the last successful build: httpserv-1.0.3

httpserv

A tiny, zero-dependency HTTP fileserver, meant for local development of HTML. It's not the absolute fastest, it's not the absolute smallest executable, it's not the most featureful, but it's incredibly simple to deploy and does almost nothing but just serve the file you name over HTTP. Specifically, all it does is:

  • Parse the URL to find the local filepath
  • Make sure that URL doesn't contain ..s
  • If that filepath points to a directory, add /index.html
  • Use the extension to figure out the Content-Type
  • Send the file back

Because of its simplicity, it's incredibly quick to install, quick to start, and quick to respond

Planned tasks in rough chronological order include:

  • General code cleanup
  • Ensure the .. block works as expected with other browsers
  • Better error handling, so errors are less likely to crash httpserv
  • Supporting anchors, querystrings, and percent-encoding in URLs
  • Testing of any kind (probably integration tests)
  • More easily customizable mappings, to support extensions with .s in
  • Multithreading, maybe feature-gated, prevents one request from blocking
  • Respecting Accept headers
  • Support for Content-Encoding, especially gzip (for pre-zipped files)
  • Feature-gated TLS support, useful for testing sites that make requests to HTTPS sites
  • Feature-gated advanced option parsing with getopts or clap, for more sane command syntax
  • Feature-gated Markdown parsing

Planned non-features include:

  • Any dependencies by default (behind a feature gate is fine)
  • Maximizing response speed where it would cost ease of use or setup speed
  • Anything that gives httpserv a noticeable delay
  • Anything targeted at better production suitability

Install

cargo install httpserv

That's it. Assuming the Cargo bin directory is on your path, you can now call httpserv from your command line. For directions on installing Cargo, please see here.

On WSL, you may need to call cargo.exe and httpserv.exe instead, depending on if you've got Rust installed on the Windows or WSL side of things.

Usage

All arguments are optional -- if you want to serve your current directory on localhost:8080 with the default mappings, you can just type httpserv and hit enter. Otherwise:

httpserv [directory] [listen] [mappings...]
  • directory: Where to look for files to serve. Defaults to .
  • listen: The host/port to listen on, as expected by the FromStr impl for SocketAddr. Defaults to localhost:8080
  • mappings...: Any additional mappings from file extension to MIME types, besides the defaults. Anything specified here which matches the same extension as a default will override the default MIME type. The format is extension=MIME, with no leading . on the extension.

Known issues

Because this is meant for local development and not production use, there are some issues which I haven't bothered to fix. In general, the reason why boils down to httpserv being meant to aid local development. If you're using it in any situation where you can't restart it at will, you're doing it very, very wrong.

  • Requests with absurdly long URLs or absurd numbers of headers can cause the process to hang or crash
  • Requests are processed serially, so if enough are received at once, some may not get responses for a while; however, the time to parse any single request is so fast that it's not an issue normally
  • If a file is changed between when the HTTP headers are sent and when the rest of the body is sent, the reported Content-Length will be incorrect, so the browser may truncate the content or display an error.