Harbor as HTTP server
The harbor server can be used as a HTTP server. You
can use the function harbor.http.register
to register
HTTP handlers. Its parameters are are follow:
harbor.http.register(port=8080,method="GET",uri,handler)
where:
-
port
is the port where to receive incoming connections -
method
is for the http method (or verb), one of:"GET"
,"PUT"
,"POST"
,"DELETE"
,"OPTIONS"
and"HEAD"
-
uri
is used to match requested uri. Perl regular expressions are accepted.
-
handler
is the function used to process requests.
handler
function has type:
(~protocol:string, ~data:string, ~headers:[(string*string)], string)->string))->unit
where:
-
protocol
is the HTTP protocol used by the client. Currently, one of"HTTP/1.0"
or"HTTP/1.1"
-
data
is the data passed during a POST request -
headers
is the list of HTTP headers sent by the client -
string
is the (unparsed) uri requested by the client, e.g.:"/foo?var=bar"
The handler
function returns HTTP and HTML data to be sent to the client,
for instance:
HTTP/1.1 200 OK\r\n\ Content-type: text/html\r\n\ Content-Length: 35\r\n\ \r\n\ <html><body>It works!</body></html>
(\r\n
should always be used for line return
in HTTP content)
For convenience, a http_response
function is provided to
create a HTTP response string. It has the following type:
(?protocol:string,?code:int,?headers:[(string*string)], ?data:string)->string
where:
-
protocol
is the HTTP protocol of the response (defaultHTTP/1.1
) -
code
is the response code (default200
) -
headers
is the response headers. It defaults to[]
but an appropriate"Content-Length"
header is added if not set by the user anddata
is not empty. -
data
is an optional response data (default""
)
Thess functions can be used to create your own HTTP interface. Some examples are:
Redirect Icecast's pages
Some source clients using the harbor may also request pages that are served by an icecast server, for instance listeners statistics. In this case, you can register the following handler:
# Redirect all files other # than /admin.* to icecast, # located at localhost:8000 def redirect_icecast(~protocol,~data,~headers,uri) = http_response( protocol=protocol, code=301, headers=[("Location","http://localhost:8000#{uri}")] ) end # Register this handler at port 8005 # (provided harbor sources are also served # from this port). harbor.http.register(port=8005,method="GET", "^/(?!admin)", redirect_icecast)
Another alternative, less recommended, is to directly fetch the page's content from the Icecast server:
# Serve all files other # than /admin.* by fetching data # from Icecast, located at localhost:8000 def proxy_icecast(~protocol,~data,~headers,uri) = def f(x) = # Replace Host if string.capitalize(fst(x)) == "HOST" then "Host: localhost:8000" else "#{fst(x)}: #{snd(x)}" end end headers = list.map(f,headers) headers = string.concat(separator="\r\n",headers) request = "#{method} #{uri} #{protocol}\r\n\ #{headers}\r\n\r\n" get_process_output("echo #{quote(request)} | \ nc localhost 8000") end # Register this handler at port 8005 # (provided harbor sources are also served # from this port). harbor.http.register(port=8005,method="GET", "^/(?!admin)", proxy_icecast)
This method is not recommended because some servers may not
close the socket after serving a request, causing nc
and
liquidsoap to hang.
Get metadata
You can use harbor to register HTTP services to
fecth/set the metadata of a source. For instance,
using the JSON export function json_of
:
meta = ref [] # s = some source # Update current metadata # converted in UTF8 def update_meta(m) = m = metadata.export(m) recode = string.recode(out_enc="UTF-8") def f(x) = (recode(fst(x)),recode(snd(x))) end meta := list.map(f,m) end # Apply update_metadata # every time we see a new # metadata s = on_metadata(update_meta,s) # Return the json content # of meta def get_meta(~protocol,~data,~headers,uri) = m = !meta http_response( protocol=protocol, code=200, headers=[("Content-Type","application/json; charset=utf-8")], data=json_of(m) ) end # Register get_meta at port 700 harbor.http.register(port=7000,method="GET","/getmeta",get_meta)
Once the script is running,
a GET/POST request for /getmeta
at port 7000
returns the following:
HTTP/1.1 200 OK Content-Type: application/json; charset=utf-8 { "genre": "Soul", "album": "The Complete Stax-Volt Singles: 1959-1968 (Disc 8)", "artist": "Astors", "title": "Daddy Didn't Tell Me" }
Which can be used with AJAX-based backends to fetch the current
metadata of source s
Set metadata
Using insert_metadata
, you can register a GET handler that
updates the metadata of a given source. For instance:
# s = some source # x is of type ((metadata)->unit)*source # first part is a function used to update # metadata and second part is the source # whose metadata are updated x = insert_metadata(s) # Get the function insert = fst(x) # Redefine s as the new source s = snd(x) # The handler def set_meta(~protocol,~data,~headers,uri) = # Split uri of the form request?foo=bar&... # into (request,[("foo","bar"),..]) x = url.split(uri) # Filter out unusual metadata meta = metadata.export(snd(x)) # Grab the returned message ret = if meta != [] then insert(meta) "OK!" else "No metadata to add!" end # Return response http_response( protocol=protocol, code=200, headers=[("Content-Type","text/html")], data="<html><body><b>#{ret}</b></body></html>" ) end # Register handler on port 700 harbor.http.register(port=7000,method="GET","/setmeta",set_meta)
Now, a request of the form http://server:7000/setmeta?title=foo
will update the metadata of source s
with [("title","foo")]
. You
can use this handler, for instance, in a custom HTML form.
Limitations
When using harbor's HTTP server, please be warned that the server is not meant to be used under heavy load. Therefore, it should not be exposed to your users/listeners if you expect many of them. In this case, you should use it as a backend/middle-end and have some kind of caching between harbor and the final user. In particular, the harbor server is not meant to server big files because it loads their entire content in memory before sending them. However, the harbor HTTP server is fully equipped to serve any kind of CGI script.