6.0 KiB
Jetforce
An experimental TCP server for the new, under development Gemini Protocol. Learn more here.
Features
- A built-in static file server with support for gemini directories and CGI scripts.
- Lightweight, single-file framework with zero external dependencies.
- Modern python codebase with type hinting and black style formatting.
- Supports concurrent connections using an asynchronous event loop.
- Extendable components that loosely implement the WSGI server/application pattern.
Installation
Requires Python 3.7+
The latest release can be installed from PyPI:
$ pip install jetforce
Or, clone the repository and run the script directly:
$ git clone https://github.com/michael-lazar/jetforce
$ cd jetforce
$ python3 jetforce.py
Usage
Use the --help
flag to view command-line options:
$ jetforce --help
usage: jetforce [-h] [-V] [--host HOST] [--port PORT] [--hostname HOSTNAME]
[--tls-certfile FILE] [--tls-keyfile FILE] [--tls-cafile FILE]
[--tls-capath DIR] [--dir DIR] [--cgi-dir DIR]
[--index-file FILE]
An Experimental Gemini Protocol Server
optional arguments:
-h, --help show this help message and exit
-V, --version show program's version number and exit
--host HOST Server address to bind to (default: 127.0.0.1)
--port PORT Server port to bind to (default: 1965)
--hostname HOSTNAME Server hostname (default: localhost)
--tls-certfile FILE Server TLS certificate file (default: None)
--tls-keyfile FILE Server TLS private key file (default: None)
--tls-cafile FILE A CA file to use for validating clients (default: None)
--tls-capath DIR A directory containing CA files for validating clients
(default: None)
--dir DIR Root directory on the filesystem to serve (default:
/var/gemini)
--cgi-dir DIR CGI script directory, relative to the server's root
directory (default: cgi-bin)
--index-file FILE If a directory contains a file with this name, that
file will be served instead of auto-generating an index
page (default: index.gmi)
Hostname
Because the gemini protocol sends the whole URL in the request, it's necessary
to declare the hostname that your server is expecting to receive traffic under.
Jetforce will reject any request that doesn't match your hostname with a status
of Proxy Request Refused
.
TLS Certificates
The gemini specification requires that all connections be sent over TLS.
If you do not provide a TLS certificate file using the --tls-certfile
flag,
jetforce will automatically generate a temporary cert for you to use. This is
great for making development easier, but before you expose your server to the
public internet you should configure something more permanent. You can generate
your own self-signed server certificate, or obtain one from a Certificate
Authority like Let's Encrypt.
Here's the OpenSSL command that jetforce uses to generate a self-signed cert:
$ openssl req -newkey rsa:2048 -nodes -keyout {hostname}.key \
-nodes -x509 -out {hostname}.crt -subj "/CN={hostname}"
Jetforce also supports verified client TLS certificates. You can specify your
client CA with the --tls-cafile
or --tls-capath
flags. Verified
connections will have the REMOTE_USER
variable added to their environment,
which contains the client certificate's CN attribute. Instructions on how to
generate TLS client certificates are outside of the scope of this readme, but
you can find many helpful tutorials
online.
There are currently no plans to support unverified (transient) client
certificates. This is due to a technical limitation of the python standard
library's ssl
module, which is described in detail
here.
Static Files
Jetforce will serve static files in the /var/gemini/
directory:
- Files ending with .gmi will be interpreted as the text/gemini type
- If a directory is requested, jetforce will look for a file in that directory
with the name of index.gmi
- If it exists, the index file will be returned
- Otherwise, jetforce will generate a directory listing
CGI Scripts
Jetforce implements a slightly modified version of the official CGI specification. Because Gemini is a less complex than HTTP, the CGI interface is also inherently easier and more straightforward to use.
The main difference in jetforce's implementation is that the CGI script is expected to write the entire gemini response verbatim to stdout:
- The status code and meta on the first line
- The optional response body on subsequent lines
The script is not allowed to respond with HTTP headers like Content-Type
,
or any other special CGI headers like internal file redirects.
Some of the HTTP specific environment variables like REQUEST_METHOD
are not
used, because they don't make sense in the context of a Gemini request.
License
This project is licensed under the Floodgap Free Software License.
The Floodgap Free Software License (FFSL) has one overriding mandate: that software using it, or derivative works based on software that uses it, must be free. By free we mean simply "free as in beer" -- you may put your work into open or closed source packages as you see fit, whether or not you choose to release your changes or updates publicly, but you must not ask any fee for it.