mongoose.h 11 KB

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  1. // Copyright (c) 2004-2012 Sergey Lyubka
  2. //
  3. // Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy
  4. // of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal
  5. // in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights
  6. // to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell
  7. // copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is
  8. // furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:
  9. //
  10. // The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in
  11. // all copies or substantial portions of the Software.
  12. //
  13. // THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR
  14. // IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY,
  15. // FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE
  16. // AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER
  17. // LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM,
  18. // OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN
  19. // THE SOFTWARE.
  20. #ifndef MONGOOSE_HEADER_INCLUDED
  21. #define MONGOOSE_HEADER_INCLUDED
  22. #include <stdio.h>
  23. #include <stddef.h>
  24. #ifdef __cplusplus
  25. extern "C" {
  26. #endif // __cplusplus
  27. struct mg_context; // Handle for the HTTP service itself
  28. struct mg_connection; // Handle for the individual connection
  29. // This structure contains information about the HTTP request.
  30. struct mg_request_info {
  31. const char *request_method; // "GET", "POST", etc
  32. const char *uri; // URL-decoded URI
  33. const char *http_version; // E.g. "1.0", "1.1"
  34. const char *query_string; // URL part after '?', not including '?', or NULL
  35. const char *remote_user; // Authenticated user, or NULL if no auth used
  36. long remote_ip; // Client's IP address
  37. int remote_port; // Client's port
  38. int is_ssl; // 1 if SSL-ed, 0 if not
  39. void *user_data; // User data pointer passed to mg_start()
  40. int num_headers; // Number of HTTP headers
  41. struct mg_header {
  42. const char *name; // HTTP header name
  43. const char *value; // HTTP header value
  44. } http_headers[64]; // Maximum 64 headers
  45. };
  46. // This structure needs to be passed to mg_start(), to let mongoose know
  47. // which callbacks to invoke. For detailed description, see
  48. // https://github.com/valenok/mongoose/blob/master/UserManual.md
  49. struct mg_callbacks {
  50. int (*begin_request)(struct mg_connection *);
  51. void (*end_request)(const struct mg_connection *, int reply_status_code);
  52. int (*log_message)(const struct mg_connection *, const char *message);
  53. int (*init_ssl)(void *ssl_context);
  54. int (*websocket_connect)(const struct mg_connection *);
  55. void (*websocket_ready)(struct mg_connection *);
  56. int (*websocket_data)(struct mg_connection *);
  57. const char * (*open_file)(const struct mg_connection *,
  58. const char *path, size_t *data_len);
  59. void (*init_lua)(struct mg_connection *, void *lua_context);
  60. void (*upload)(struct mg_connection *, const char *file_name);
  61. int (*http_error)(struct mg_connection *, int status);
  62. };
  63. // Start web server.
  64. //
  65. // Parameters:
  66. // callbacks: mg_callbacks structure with user-defined callbacks.
  67. // options: NULL terminated list of option_name, option_value pairs that
  68. // specify Mongoose configuration parameters.
  69. //
  70. // Side-effects: on UNIX, ignores SIGCHLD and SIGPIPE signals. If custom
  71. // processing is required for these, signal handlers must be set up
  72. // after calling mg_start().
  73. //
  74. //
  75. // Example:
  76. // const char *options[] = {
  77. // "document_root", "/var/www",
  78. // "listening_ports", "80,443s",
  79. // NULL
  80. // };
  81. // struct mg_context *ctx = mg_start(&my_func, NULL, options);
  82. //
  83. // Please refer to http://code.google.com/p/mongoose/wiki/MongooseManual
  84. // for the list of valid option and their possible values.
  85. //
  86. // Return:
  87. // web server context, or NULL on error.
  88. struct mg_context *mg_start(const struct mg_callbacks *callbacks,
  89. void *user_data,
  90. const char **configuration_options);
  91. // Stop the web server.
  92. //
  93. // Must be called last, when an application wants to stop the web server and
  94. // release all associated resources. This function blocks until all Mongoose
  95. // threads are stopped. Context pointer becomes invalid.
  96. void mg_stop(struct mg_context *);
  97. // Get the value of particular configuration parameter.
  98. // The value returned is read-only. Mongoose does not allow changing
  99. // configuration at run time.
  100. // If given parameter name is not valid, NULL is returned. For valid
  101. // names, return value is guaranteed to be non-NULL. If parameter is not
  102. // set, zero-length string is returned.
  103. const char *mg_get_option(const struct mg_context *ctx, const char *name);
  104. // Return array of strings that represent valid configuration options.
  105. // For each option, a short name, long name, and default value is returned.
  106. // Array is NULL terminated.
  107. const char **mg_get_valid_option_names(void);
  108. // Add, edit or delete the entry in the passwords file.
  109. //
  110. // This function allows an application to manipulate .htpasswd files on the
  111. // fly by adding, deleting and changing user records. This is one of the
  112. // several ways of implementing authentication on the server side. For another,
  113. // cookie-based way please refer to the examples/chat.c in the source tree.
  114. //
  115. // If password is not NULL, entry is added (or modified if already exists).
  116. // If password is NULL, entry is deleted.
  117. //
  118. // Return:
  119. // 1 on success, 0 on error.
  120. int mg_modify_passwords_file(const char *passwords_file_name,
  121. const char *domain,
  122. const char *user,
  123. const char *password);
  124. // Return information associated with the request.
  125. struct mg_request_info *mg_get_request_info(struct mg_connection *);
  126. // Send data to the client.
  127. // Return:
  128. // 0 when the connection has been closed
  129. // -1 on error
  130. // number of bytes written on success
  131. int mg_write(struct mg_connection *, const void *buf, size_t len);
  132. #undef PRINTF_FORMAT_STRING
  133. #if _MSC_VER >= 1400
  134. #include <sal.h>
  135. #if _MSC_VER > 1400
  136. #define PRINTF_FORMAT_STRING(s) _Printf_format_string_ s
  137. #else
  138. #define PRINTF_FORMAT_STRING(s) __format_string s
  139. #endif
  140. #else
  141. #define PRINTF_FORMAT_STRING(s) s
  142. #endif
  143. #ifdef __GNUC__
  144. #define PRINTF_ARGS(x, y) __attribute__((format(printf, x, y)))
  145. #else
  146. #define PRINTF_ARGS(x, y)
  147. #endif
  148. // Send data to the browser using printf() semantics.
  149. //
  150. // Works exactly like mg_write(), but allows to do message formatting.
  151. // Below are the macros for enabling compiler-specific checks for
  152. // printf-like arguments.
  153. int mg_printf(struct mg_connection *,
  154. PRINTF_FORMAT_STRING(const char *fmt), ...) PRINTF_ARGS(2, 3);
  155. // Send contents of the entire file together with HTTP headers.
  156. void mg_send_file(struct mg_connection *conn, const char *path);
  157. // Read data from the remote end, return number of bytes read.
  158. int mg_read(struct mg_connection *, void *buf, size_t len);
  159. // Get the value of particular HTTP header.
  160. //
  161. // This is a helper function. It traverses request_info->http_headers array,
  162. // and if the header is present in the array, returns its value. If it is
  163. // not present, NULL is returned.
  164. const char *mg_get_header(const struct mg_connection *, const char *name);
  165. // Get a value of particular form variable.
  166. //
  167. // Parameters:
  168. // data: pointer to form-uri-encoded buffer. This could be either POST data,
  169. // or request_info.query_string.
  170. // data_len: length of the encoded data.
  171. // var_name: variable name to decode from the buffer
  172. // dst: destination buffer for the decoded variable
  173. // dst_len: length of the destination buffer
  174. //
  175. // Return:
  176. // On success, length of the decoded variable.
  177. // On error:
  178. // -1 (variable not found).
  179. // -2 (destination buffer is NULL, zero length or too small to hold the decoded variable).
  180. //
  181. // Destination buffer is guaranteed to be '\0' - terminated if it is not
  182. // NULL or zero length.
  183. int mg_get_var(const char *data, size_t data_len,
  184. const char *var_name, char *dst, size_t dst_len);
  185. // Fetch value of certain cookie variable into the destination buffer.
  186. //
  187. // Destination buffer is guaranteed to be '\0' - terminated. In case of
  188. // failure, dst[0] == '\0'. Note that RFC allows many occurrences of the same
  189. // parameter. This function returns only first occurrence.
  190. //
  191. // Return:
  192. // On success, value length.
  193. // On error:
  194. // -1 (either "Cookie:" header is not present at all or the requested parameter is not found).
  195. // -2 (destination buffer is NULL, zero length or too small to hold the value).
  196. int mg_get_cookie(const struct mg_connection *,
  197. const char *cookie_name, char *buf, size_t buf_len);
  198. // Download data from the remote web server.
  199. // host: host name to connect to, e.g. "foo.com", or "10.12.40.1".
  200. // port: port number, e.g. 80.
  201. // use_ssl: wether to use SSL connection.
  202. // error_buffer, error_buffer_size: error message placeholder.
  203. // request_fmt,...: HTTP request.
  204. // Return:
  205. // On success, valid pointer to the new connection, suitable for mg_read().
  206. // On error, NULL. error_buffer contains error message.
  207. // Example:
  208. // char ebuf[100];
  209. // struct mg_connection *conn;
  210. // conn = mg_download("google.com", 80, 0, ebuf, sizeof(ebuf),
  211. // "%s", "GET / HTTP/1.0\r\nHost: google.com\r\n\r\n");
  212. struct mg_connection *mg_download(const char *host, int port, int use_ssl,
  213. char *error_buffer, size_t error_buffer_size,
  214. PRINTF_FORMAT_STRING(const char *request_fmt),
  215. ...) PRINTF_ARGS(6, 7);
  216. // Close the connection opened by mg_download().
  217. void mg_close_connection(struct mg_connection *conn);
  218. // File upload functionality. Each uploaded file gets saved into a temporary
  219. // file and MG_UPLOAD event is sent.
  220. // Return number of uploaded files.
  221. int mg_upload(struct mg_connection *conn, const char *destination_dir);
  222. // Convenience function -- create detached thread.
  223. // Return: 0 on success, non-0 on error.
  224. typedef void * (*mg_thread_func_t)(void *);
  225. int mg_start_thread(mg_thread_func_t f, void *p);
  226. // Return builtin mime type for the given file name.
  227. // For unrecognized extensions, "text/plain" is returned.
  228. const char *mg_get_builtin_mime_type(const char *file_name);
  229. // Return Mongoose version.
  230. const char *mg_version(void);
  231. // MD5 hash given strings.
  232. // Buffer 'buf' must be 33 bytes long. Varargs is a NULL terminated list of
  233. // ASCIIz strings. When function returns, buf will contain human-readable
  234. // MD5 hash. Example:
  235. // char buf[33];
  236. // mg_md5(buf, "aa", "bb", NULL);
  237. void mg_md5(char buf[33], ...);
  238. #ifdef __cplusplus
  239. }
  240. #endif // __cplusplus
  241. #endif // MONGOOSE_HEADER_INCLUDED