darkhttpd/trunk
Emil Mikulic f5c051aad5 [ darkhttpd-1.5 release ]
(we skipped 1.4 due to a release engineering oversight)

Update README to reflect Makefile changes.
2013-04-28 20:20:06 +10:00
..
AUTHORS Update copyright years. 2013-04-28 19:55:36 +10:00
darkhttpd.c [ darkhttpd-1.5 release ] 2013-04-28 20:20:06 +10:00
Makefile Simplify the Makefile. 2013-04-28 19:56:51 +10:00
README [ darkhttpd-1.5 release ] 2013-04-28 20:20:06 +10:00

darkhttpd Operational Manual
============================

How to build darkhttpd
----------------------

Simply run make:
	$ make



How to run darkhttpd, with examples
-----------------------------------

Serve /var/www/htdocs on the default port (port 80):
	$ ./darkhttpd /var/www/htdocs

Serve ~/public_html on port 8081:
	$ ./darkhttpd ~/public_html --port 8081

Only bind to one IP address (useful on multi-homed systems):
	$ ./darkhttpd ~/public_html --addr 192.168.0.1

Serve at most 4 simultaneous connections:
	$ ./darkhttpd ~/public_html --maxconn 4

Log accesses to a file:
	$ ./darkhttpd ~/public_html --log access.log

Chroot for extra security (you need root privs for chroot):
	$ ./darkhttpd /var/www/htdocs --chroot

Use default.htm instead of index.html:
	$ ./darkhttpd /var/www/htdocs --index default.htm

Add mimetypes - in this case, serve .dat files as text/plain:
	$ cat extramime
	text/plain	dat
	$ ./darkhttpd /var/www/htdocs --mimetypes extramime

Drop privileges:
	$ ./darkhttpd /var/www/htdocs --uid www --gid www

Use acceptfilter (FreeBSD only):
	$ kldload accf_http
	$ ./darkhttpd /var/www/htdocs --accf

Run in the background and create a pidfile:
	$ ./darkhttpd /var/www/htdocs --pidfile /var/run/httpd.pid --daemon

Commandline options can be combined:
	$ ./darkhttpd ~/public_html --port 8080 --addr 127.0.0.1

To see a full list of commandline options,
run darkhttpd without any arguments:
	$ ./darkhttpd