A Redis HTTP interface with JSON output
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Nicolas Favre-Felix 290656409f Disable SELECT command - issue #80 11 years ago
formats Remove BSON support 12 years ago
hiredis Update hiredis to fd38e55d71 12 years ago
http-parser Start changing HTTP parser. 14 years ago
jansson Added missing file. 14 years ago
libb64 Base64 encode of user:password for HTTP Basic Auth. 14 years ago
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sha1 Started implementing the new WebSocket protocol 13 years ago
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.gitignore Started pub/sub test. 14 years ago
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README.markdown Write pidfile when daemonized (GitHub issue #10) 11 years ago
acl.c Disable SELECT command - issue #80 11 years ago
acl.h Fix ACLs 14 years ago
client.c Handle memory allocation issues better. 13 years ago
client.h Handle memory allocation issues better. 13 years ago
cmd.c Remove access to free'd memory in cmd_free 12 years ago
cmd.h Create new connection for new separate DBs. 12 years ago
conf.c Write pidfile when daemonized (GitHub issue #10) 11 years ago
conf.h Write pidfile when daemonized (GitHub issue #10) 11 years ago
http.c two minor protocol issues with Chrome/web standards 11 years ago
http.h Make pub/sub chunks async. 13 years ago
pool.c Free Redis context for custom connections 12 years ago
pool.h Free Redis context for custom connections 12 years ago
server.c Reopen logs on SIGHUP (GitHub issue #10) 11 years ago
server.h Fixed log buf, removed spin lock. 14 years ago
slog.c Reopen logs on SIGHUP (GitHub issue #10) 11 years ago
slog.h Reopen logs on SIGHUP (GitHub issue #10) 11 years ago
webdis.c Partial rewrite, adding WebSockets, threads, pool. 14 years ago
webdis.json Remove BSON support 12 years ago
webdis.prod.json Added fix-config.diff and install-target.diff by @jollyroger. 13 years ago
websocket.c If the command is a SUBSCRIBE or a PSUBSCRIBE, the keep alive should be 1, keeping the connection alive from the web socket and enabling the client to manage its lifecycle. This seems to do the trick but I don't know enough about the webdis architecture as to guarantee that there are no side effects. But so far seems to do the trick. 12 years ago
websocket.h Removed endian.h 13 years ago
worker.c Create new connection for new separate DBs. 12 years ago
worker.h Partial rewrite, adding WebSockets, threads, pool. 14 years ago

README.markdown

About

A very simple web server providing an HTTP interface to Redis. It uses hiredis, jansson, libevent, and http-parser.

Webdis depends on libevent-dev. You can install it on Ubuntu by typing sudo apt-get install libevent-dev or on OS X by typing brew install libevent.

make clean all

./webdis &

curl http://127.0.0.1:7379/SET/hello/world
→ {"SET":[true,"OK"]}

curl http://127.0.0.1:7379/GET/hello
→ {"GET":"world"}

curl -d "GET/hello" http://127.0.0.1:7379/
→ {"GET":"world"}

Features

  • GET and POST are supported, as well as PUT for file uploads.
  • JSON output by default, optional JSONP parameter (?jsonp=myFunction or ?callback=myFunction).
  • Raw Redis 2.0 protocol output with .raw suffix
  • MessagePack output with .msg suffix
  • HTTP 1.1 pipelining (70,000 http requests per second on a desktop Linux machine.)
  • Multi-threaded server, configurable number of worker threads.
  • WebSocket support (Currently using the “hixie-76” specification).
  • Connects to Redis using a TCP or UNIX socket.
  • Restricted commands by IP range (CIDR subnet + mask) or HTTP Basic Auth, returning 403 errors.
  • Possible Redis authentication in the config file.
  • Pub/Sub using Transfer-Encoding: chunked, works with JSONP as well. Webdis can be used as a Comet server.
  • Drop privileges on startup.
  • Custom Content-Type using a pre-defined file extension, or with ?type=some/thing.
  • URL-encoded parameters for binary data or slashes and question marks. For instance, %2f is decoded as / but not used as a command separator.
  • Logs, with a configurable verbosity.
  • Cross-origin requests, usable with XMLHttpRequest2 (Cross-Origin Resource Sharing - CORS).
  • File upload with PUT.
  • With the JSON output, the return value of INFO is parsed and transformed into an object.
  • Optional daemonize: set "daemonize": true and "pidfile": "/var/run/webdis.pid" in webdis.json.
  • Default root object: Add "default_root": "/GET/index.html" in webdis.json to substitute the request to / with a Redis request.
  • HTTP request limit with http_max_request_size (in bytes, set to 128MB by default).
  • Database selection in the URL, using e.g. /7/GET/key to run the command on DB 7.

Ideas, TODO...

  • Add better support for PUT, DELETE, HEAD, OPTIONS? How? For which commands?
    • This could be done using a “strict mode” with a table of commands and the verbs that can/must be used with each command. Strict mode would be optional, configurable. How would webdis know of new commands remains to be determined.
  • MULTI/EXEC/DISCARD/WATCH are disabled at the moment; find a way to use them.
  • Support POST of raw Redis protocol data, and execute the whole thing. This could be useful for MULTI/EXEC transactions.
  • Enrich config file:
    • Provide timeout (maybe for some commands only?). What should the response be? 504 Gateway Timeout? 503 Service Unavailable?
  • Multi-server support, using consistent hashing.
  • SSL?
    • Not sure if this is such a good idea.
  • SPDY?
    • SPDY is mostly useful for parallel fetches. Not sure if it would make sense for Webdis.
  • Send your ideas using the github tracker, on twitter @yowgi or by mail to n.favrefelix@gmail.com.

HTTP error codes

  • Unknown HTTP verb: 405 Method Not Allowed.
  • Redis is unreachable: 503 Service Unavailable.
  • Matching ETag sent using If-None-Match: 304 Not Modified.
  • Could also be used:
    • Timeout on the redis side: 503 Service Unavailable.
    • Missing key: 404 Not Found.
    • Unauthorized command (disabled in config file): 403 Forbidden.

Command format

The URI /COMMAND/arg0/arg1/.../argN.ext executes the command on Redis and returns the response to the client. GET, POST, and PUT are supported:

  • GET /COMMAND/arg0/.../argN.ext
  • POST / with COMMAND/arg0/.../argN in the HTTP body.
  • PUT /COMMAND/arg0.../argN-1 with argN in the HTTP body (see section on file uploads.)

.ext is an optional extension; it is not read as part of the last argument but only represents the output format. Several formats are available (see below).

Special characters: / and . have special meanings, / separates arguments and . changes the Content-Type. They can be replaced by %2f and %2e, respectively.

ACL

Access control is configured in webdis.json. Each configuration tries to match a client profile according to two criterias:

Each ACL contains two lists of commands, enabled and disabled. All commands being enabled by default, it is up to the administrator to disable or re-enable them on a per-profile basis. Examples:

{
	"disabled":	["DEBUG", "FLUSHDB", "FLUSHALL"],
},

{
	"http_basic_auth": "user:password",
	"disabled":	["DEBUG", "FLUSHDB", "FLUSHALL"],
	"enabled":	["SET"]
},

{
	"ip": 		"192.168.10.0/24",
	"enabled":	["SET"]
},

{
	"http_basic_auth": "user:password",
	"ip": 		"192.168.10.0/24",
	"enabled":	["SET", "DEL"]
}

ACLs are interpreted in order, later authorizations superseding earlier ones if a client matches several. The special value "*" matches all commands.

JSON output

JSON is the default output format. Each command returns a JSON object with the command as a key and the result as a value.

Examples:

// string
$ curl http://127.0.0.1:7379/GET/y
{"GET":"41"}

// number
$ curl http://127.0.0.1:7379/INCR/y
{"INCR":42}

// list
$ curl http://127.0.0.1:7379/LRANGE/x/0/1
{"LRANGE":["abc","def"]}

// status
$ curl http://127.0.0.1:7379/TYPE/y
{"TYPE":[true,"string"]}

// error, which is basically a status
$ curl http://127.0.0.1:7379/MAKE-ME-COFFEE
{"MAKE-ME-COFFEE":[false,"ERR unknown command 'MAKE-ME-COFFEE'"]}

// JSONP callback:
$ curl  "http://127.0.0.1:7379/TYPE/y?jsonp=myCustomFunction"
myCustomFunction({"TYPE":[true,"string"]})

RAW output

This is the raw output of Redis; enable it with the .raw suffix.


// string
$ curl http://127.0.0.1:7379/GET/z.raw
$5
hello

// number
curl http://127.0.0.1:7379/INCR/a.raw
:2

// list
$ curl http://127.0.0.1:7379/LRANGE/x/0/-1.raw
*2
$3
abc
$3
def

// status
$ curl http://127.0.0.1:7379/TYPE/y.raw
+zset

// error, which is basically a status
$ curl http://127.0.0.1:7379/MAKE-ME-COFFEE.raw
-ERR unknown command 'MAKE-ME-COFFEE'

Custom content-type

Several content-types are available:

  • .json for application/json (this is the default Content-Type).
  • .msg for application/x-msgpack. See http://msgpack.org/ for the specs.
  • .txt for text/plain
  • .html for text/html
  • xhtml for application/xhtml+xml
  • xml for text/xml
  • .png for image/png
  • jpg or jpeg for image/jpeg
  • Any other with the ?type=anything/youwant query string.
  • Add a custom separator for list responses with ?sep=, query string.
curl -v "http://127.0.0.1:7379/GET/hello.html"
[...]
< HTTP/1.1 200 OK
< Content-Type: text/html
< Date: Mon, 03 Jan 2011 20:43:36 GMT
< Content-Length: 137
<
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
[...]
</html>

curl -v "http://127.0.0.1:7379/GET/hello.txt"
[...]
< HTTP/1.1 200 OK
< Content-Type: text/plain
< Date: Mon, 03 Jan 2011 20:43:36 GMT
< Content-Length: 137
[...]

curl -v "http://127.0.0.1:7379/GET/big-file?type=application/pdf"
[...]
< HTTP/1.1 200 OK
< Content-Type: application/pdf
< Date: Mon, 03 Jan 2011 20:45:12 GMT
[...]

File upload

Webdis supports file upload using HTTP PUT. The command URI is slightly different, as the last argument is taken from the HTTP body. For example: instead of /SET/key/value, the URI becomes /SET/key and the value is the entirety of the body. This works for other commands such as LPUSH, etc.

Uploading a binary file to webdis:

$ file redis-logo.png
redis-logo.png: PNG image, 513 x 197, 8-bit/color RGBA, non-interlaced

$ wc -c redis-logo.png
16744 redis-logo.png

$ curl -v --upload-file redis-logo.png http://127.0.0.1:7379/SET/logo
[...]
> PUT /SET/logo HTTP/1.1
> User-Agent: curl/7.19.7 (x86_64-pc-linux-gnu) libcurl/7.19.7 OpenSSL/0.9.8k zlib/1.2.3.3 libidn/1.15
> Host: 127.0.0.1:7379
> Accept: */*
> Content-Length: 16744
> Expect: 100-continue
>
< HTTP/1.1 100 Continue
< HTTP/1.1 200 OK
< Content-Type: application/json
< ETag: "0db1124cf79ffeb80aff6d199d5822f8"
< Date: Sun, 09 Jan 2011 16:48:19 GMT
< Content-Length: 19
<
{"SET":[true,"OK"]}

$ curl -vs http://127.0.0.1:7379/GET/logo.png -o out.png
> GET /GET/logo.png HTTP/1.1
> User-Agent: curl/7.19.7 (x86_64-pc-linux-gnu) libcurl/7.19.7 OpenSSL/0.9.8k zlib/1.2.3.3 libidn/1.15
> Host: 127.0.0.1:7379
> Accept: */*
>
< HTTP/1.1 200 OK
< Content-Type: image/png
< ETag: "1991df597267d70bf9066a7d11969da0"
< Date: Sun, 09 Jan 2011 16:50:51 GMT
< Content-Length: 16744

$ md5sum redis-logo.png out.png
1991df597267d70bf9066a7d11969da0  redis-logo.png
1991df597267d70bf9066a7d11969da0  out.png

The file was uploaded and re-downloaded properly: it has the same hash and the content-type was set properly thanks to the .png extension.

WebSockets

Webdis supports WebSocket clients implementing dixie-76.
Web Sockets are supported with the following formats, selected by the connection URL:

  • JSON (on / or /.json)
  • Raw Redis wire protocol (on /.raw)

Example:

function testJSON() {
	var jsonSocket = new WebSocket("ws://127.0.0.1:7379/.json");
	jsonSocket.onopen = function() {

		console.log("JSON socket connected!");
		jsonSocket.send(JSON.stringify(["SET", "hello", "world"]));
		jsonSocket.send(JSON.stringify(["GET", "hello"]));
	};
	jsonSocket.onmessage = function(messageEvent) {
		console.log("JSON received:", messageEvent.data);
	};
}
testJSON();

This produces the following output:

JSON socket connected!
JSON received: {"SET":[true,"OK"]}
JSON received: {"GET":"world"}

Pub/Sub with chunked transfer encoding

Webdis exposes Redis PUB/SUB channels to HTTP clients, forwarding messages in the channel as they are published by Redis. This is done using chunked transfer encoding.

Example using XMLHttpRequest:

var previous_response_length = 0
xhr = new XMLHttpRequest()
xhr.open("GET", "http://127.0.0.1:7379/SUBSCRIBE/hello", true);
xhr.onreadystatechange = checkData;
xhr.send(null);

function checkData() {
	if(xhr.readyState == 3)  {
    	response = xhr.responseText;
    	chunk = response.slice(previous_response_length);
    	previous_response_length = response.length;
    	console.log(chunk);
    }
};

Publish messages to redis to see output similar to the following:

{"SUBSCRIBE":["subscribe","hello",1]}
{"SUBSCRIBE":["message","hello","some message"]}
{"SUBSCRIBE":["message","hello","some other message"]}