I wasn't happy with how responses were generated. HTTP-headers were
handled by hand and it was duplicated in multiple parts of the code.
Due to the duplication, some functions like timestamp() had really
ugly semantics.
The HTTP requests are parsed much better: We have an enum of fields
we care about that are automatically read into our request struct. This
commit adapts this idea to the response: We have an enum of fields
we might put into our response, and a response-struct holds the
content of these fields. A function http_send_header() automatically
sends a header based on the entries in response. In case we don't
use a field, we just leave the field in the response-struct empty.
With this commit, some logical changes came with it:
- timestamp() now has a sane signature, TIMESTAMP_LEN is no more and
it can now return proper errors and is also reentrant by using
gmtime_r() instead of gmtime()
- No more use of a static timestamp-array, making all the methods
also reentrant
- Better internal-error-reporting: Because the fields are filled
before and not during sending the response-headers, we can better
report any internal errors as status 500 instead of sending a
partial non-500-header and then dying.
These improved data structures make it easier to read and hack the code
and implement new features, if desired.
Signed-off-by: Laslo Hunhold <dev@frign.de>
It has been on my todo-list for a long time. I tested it on
OpenBSD 6.5.
Thanks Richard Ulmer for the reminder.
Signed-off-by: Laslo Hunhold <dev@frign.de>
The config.h-interface has proven to be very effective for a lot of
suckless tools, but it just does not make too much sense for a web
server like quark.
$ quark
If you run multiple instances of it, you want to see in the command line
(or top) what it does, and given the amount of options it's logical to
just express them as options given in the command line.
It also is a problem if you can modify quark via the config.h,
contradicting the manual. Just saying "Well, then don't touch config.h"
is also not good, as the vhost and map options were only exposed via
this interface.
What is left in config.h are mime-types and two constants relating to
the incoming HTTP-header-limits.
In order to introduce these changes, some structs and safe utility
functions were added and imported from OpenBSD respectively.
And many other things, too many to list here. For example, it now
properly logs uds instead of erroring out.
Separating concerns in many places definitely improves the readability.