>
>Hi,
>
>Does cppcms provide any help serving static files? Any tutorial?
For serving static files the web server it the best option... :-)
>
>I would like to use cppcms to serve static files so that I can
>implement the same permission logic as dynamic contents.
>
Since it was asked more then once.
--------------------------------
This is quite different. To handle this kind of situation
you should be aware of two very important factors:
1. Security
2. Performance
## Security
Let's start from the first. I assume you want to let user
to download certain files that you are controlling.
For url like
/some/files/[...] <- these are allows.
Things you DO NOT EVER-EVER-EVER do:
class my_server {
my_server(...)
{
...
dispatcher().assign("/some/files/(.*)",&my_server::serve_file,this,1)
}
void serve_file(std::string file_name)
{
std::ifstream f(("some_dir_name/" + file_name).c_str());
if(!f) {
response().status(404)
}
else {
response().content_type("application/octet-stream")
response().out() << f.rdbuf();
}
}
...
}
Because attacker cat create path
/some/files/../../../etc/some_secret.txt
And read it...
It would be VERY BAD.
If you want to serve a file create a very strict **WHITE** list
of allowed names like:
/some/files/([a-z_0-9\.]\.txt)
Or even better convert the name to sha1 representation and save
files using cryptographic hash.
Like:
name = some_dir_per_user + "/" + cppcms::util::md5hex(file_name) + ".dat";
std::ifstream f(name.c_str());
## Performance
For small files (several K or even MB)
response().out() << f.rdbuf();
Is fine and works very well.
For the big files it is better to use headers like X-Send-File that are
supported by lighttpd, apache and nginx.
http://redmine.lighttpd.net/projects/1/wiki/X-LIGHTTPD-send-file
So instead of calling
response().content_type("application/octet-stream")
response().out() << f.rdbuf();
You call:
response().content_type("application/octet-stream")
response().set_header("X-Lighttpd-Send-File",pysical_file_name);
This is specially critical for big files were the
server may for example save the entire FastCGI output
to temporary file and before serving it (Nginx) or
cache entire (huge) buffer in the memory (Lighttpd)
More then that X-SendFile usually much more effective as
it allows to the web server not to transfer buffers
to the memory.
----------------
Now, please be so kind and put this to the wiki
under the tutorial section :-)
Artyom Beilis.
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