Jump to page: 1 2
Thread overview
D web apps: cgi.d now supports scgi
Mar 25, 2012
Adam D. Ruppe
Mar 25, 2012
Andrea Fontana
Mar 25, 2012
dnewbie
Mar 25, 2012
Adam D. Ruppe
Mar 25, 2012
dnewbie
Mar 25, 2012
dnewbie
Mar 25, 2012
Adam D. Ruppe
Mar 25, 2012
James Miller
Mar 25, 2012
Adam D. Ruppe
Mar 25, 2012
James Miller
Mar 25, 2012
Adam D. Ruppe
Mar 26, 2012
Kapps
Mar 26, 2012
Dejan Lekic
Mar 27, 2012
Ary Manzana
Mar 27, 2012
Adam D. Ruppe
Mar 27, 2012
Ary Manzana
March 25, 2012
https://github.com/adamdruppe/misc-stuff-including-D-programming-language-web-stuff

some docs:
http://arsdnet.net/web.d/cgi.html
http://arsdnet.net/web.d/cgi.d.html

The file cgi.d in there is my base library for web apps.

Previously, it spoke regular CGI, FastCGI (with help
from a C lib) and HTTP (with help from the netman.d
and httpd.d files in that github).


Now, in addition to those options, it also speaks
SCGI - all by itself - and it can speak http without
needing helper modules.

The new embedded http server should work on all
platforms too, not just linux like the old one, but
I haven't tested it yet.


This finishes out all the major web app interfaces
that I'm aware of.


To use them, you write your app with a GenericMain
and always communicate through the Cgi object it
passes you.

===
import arsd.cgi;
void hello(Cgi cgi) {
    cgi.write("Hello, world! " ~ cgi.request("name") ~ "\n");
}
mixin GenericMain!hello;
===


And then compile:

dmd hello.d arsd/cgi.d # builds a CGI binary
dmd hello.d arsd/cgi.d -version=fastcgi # FastCGI. needs libfcgi C lib
dmd hello.d arsd/cgi.d -version=scgi # SCGI
dmd hello.d arsd/cgi.d -version=embedded_httpd # built-in http server


The API is the same with all four options.

With cgi or fastcgi, you put the binary where your web
server can run it.

With scgi and embedded_httpd, you run the binary. It
persists as an application server. On the command line,
you can say use the option "--port 5000" for example
to change the listening tcp port.

The default for httpd right now is 8085. The default
for scgi is 4000.



Well, I don't have much else to say, but since it
now does all four of the big interfaces easily,
I thought I'd say something here.

If you're interested in web programming with D,
this will lay the foundation for you.
March 25, 2012
+1 for scgi support :)

On Sunday, 25 March 2012 at 04:43:07 UTC, Adam D. Ruppe wrote:
> https://github.com/adamdruppe/misc-stuff-including-D-programming-language-web-stuff
>
> some docs:
> http://arsdnet.net/web.d/cgi.html
> http://arsdnet.net/web.d/cgi.d.html
>
> The file cgi.d in there is my base library for web apps.
>
> Previously, it spoke regular CGI, FastCGI (with help
> from a C lib) and HTTP (with help from the netman.d
> and httpd.d files in that github).
>
>
> Now, in addition to those options, it also speaks
> SCGI - all by itself - and it can speak http without
> needing helper modules.
>
> The new embedded http server should work on all
> platforms too, not just linux like the old one, but
> I haven't tested it yet.
>
>
> This finishes out all the major web app interfaces
> that I'm aware of.
>
>
> To use them, you write your app with a GenericMain
> and always communicate through the Cgi object it
> passes you.
>
> ===
> import arsd.cgi;
> void hello(Cgi cgi) {
>     cgi.write("Hello, world! " ~ cgi.request("name") ~ "\n");
> }
> mixin GenericMain!hello;
> ===
>
>
> And then compile:
>
> dmd hello.d arsd/cgi.d # builds a CGI binary
> dmd hello.d arsd/cgi.d -version=fastcgi # FastCGI. needs libfcgi C lib
> dmd hello.d arsd/cgi.d -version=scgi # SCGI
> dmd hello.d arsd/cgi.d -version=embedded_httpd # built-in http server
>
>
> The API is the same with all four options.
>
> With cgi or fastcgi, you put the binary where your web
> server can run it.
>
> With scgi and embedded_httpd, you run the binary. It
> persists as an application server. On the command line,
> you can say use the option "--port 5000" for example
> to change the listening tcp port.
>
> The default for httpd right now is 8085. The default
> for scgi is 4000.
>
>
>
> Well, I don't have much else to say, but since it
> now does all four of the big interfaces easily,
> I thought I'd say something here.
>
> If you're interested in web programming with D,
> this will lay the foundation for you.


March 25, 2012
Thanks for doing this (and the other misc stuff)
I wonder how can I generate unique, non predictable session ids.
March 25, 2012
On Sunday, 25 March 2012 at 19:14:32 UTC, dnewbie wrote:
> I wonder how can I generate unique, non predictable session ids.

In web.d, there's a Session class that generates them
with std.random.uniform. I suspect this isn't the
best possible, but it's worked pretty well so far.

The session class also uses a file to store persistent
string key/value data.
March 25, 2012
On Sunday, 25 March 2012 at 19:22:02 UTC, Adam D. Ruppe wrote:
> On Sunday, 25 March 2012 at 19:14:32 UTC, dnewbie wrote:
>> I wonder how can I generate unique, non predictable session ids.
>
> In web.d, there's a Session class that generates them
> with std.random.uniform. I suspect this isn't the
> best possible, but it's worked pretty well so far.
>
> The session class also uses a file to store persistent
> string key/value data.

This is what I was looking for. Rock'n'roll!!
March 25, 2012
I can't compile web.d

Notice: As of Phobos 2.055, std.date and std.dateparse have been deprecated. They will be removed in February 2012. Please use std.datetime instead.
arsd\web.d(2671): Error: function std.date.dateFromTime is deprecated
arsd\web.d(2672): Error: function std.date.yearFromTime is deprecated
arsd\web.d(2673): Error: function std.date.monthFromTime is deprecated
March 25, 2012
On 26 March 2012 08:37, dnewbie <run3@myopera.com> wrote:
> On Sunday, 25 March 2012 at 19:22:02 UTC, Adam D. Ruppe wrote:
>>
>> On Sunday, 25 March 2012 at 19:14:32 UTC, dnewbie wrote:
>>>
>>> I wonder how can I generate unique, non predictable session ids.
>>
>>
>> In web.d, there's a Session class that generates them
>> with std.random.uniform. I suspect this isn't the
>> best possible, but it's worked pretty well so far.
>>
>> The session class also uses a file to store persistent string key/value data.
>
>
> This is what I was looking for. Rock'n'roll!!

Slightly off-topic, but what is your policy of derivative works Adam? So if I built something similar off your work, but gave you credit, and pushed any changes/bugfixes/improvements back to you, that would be ok?

Basically, if I build my own libraries off yours, I assume that fine. Since I don't really want to repeat all the work you have done already.

--
James Miller
March 25, 2012
On Sunday, 25 March 2012 at 20:12:16 UTC, dnewbie wrote:
> I can't compile web.d

Oh yeah, Phobos loves removing perfectly good functionality.

Just open the file and comment out that function.

Make it simply:

        string date(string replacement, string[], in Element, string) {
/*
                auto date = to!long(replacement);

                import std.date;

                auto day = dateFromTime(date);
                auto year = yearFromTime(date);
                auto month = monthNames[monthFromTime(date)];
                replacement = format("%s %d, %d", month, day, year);
*/
                return replacement;
        }


and it will be fine. That function isn't really needed,
it is just one of the template formatting options.


Eventually, I'll port it to the monster that is std.datetime
but I'm not in a big rush.
March 25, 2012
On Sunday, 25 March 2012 at 20:18:51 UTC, James Miller wrote:
> Slightly off-topic, but what is your policy of derivative works Adam?

I don't really care; you can do whatever you want with it.

It is generally Boost license like Phobos (I put it at the
bottom of the files since licenses annoy me) which is
pretty permissive.

> and pushed any changes/bugfixes/improvements back to you, that would be ok?

Yea. And if your new functions might be generally useful
or mix right it, feel free to do a pull request for that too.
It is a "misc stuff" repo :P
March 25, 2012
On Sunday, 25 March 2012 at 19:37:12 UTC, dnewbie wrote:
> This is what I was looking for. Rock'n'roll!!

BTW I tried to keep Session simple, and there's some
doc comments, but the basic usage is as simple as:

// loads the session, or creates a new one if needed
auto session = new Session(cgi);

// it does NOT auto save, so you want to call
// session.commit() when you're done.
// scope(exit) makes that easy.
scope(exit) session.commit();

bool checkLogin() {
    if(session.hasKey("user_id")) { // see if a key is set
       // the user is logged in
       string uid = session.user_id; // can get data via opDispatch
       return true;
    }
    return false;
}

void logout() {
    session.invalidate(); // clears and deletes the session
}

void login() {
    session.invalidate(); // kill the guest session
    session.user_id = uid; // save the user id in the session via opDispatch
}




If you use web.d's FancyMain, it creates a session for
you, so your ApiProvider class already has a session
member you can tap right into.


import web.d;
class MySite : ApiProvider {
   void something () {
         session.cool = "something"; // works
   }
}
mixin FancyMain!MySite;
« First   ‹ Prev
1 2