tntnet.xml - configuration file for tntnet(8)
Tntnet is configured using a xml file. The name of the file is
tntnet.xml. The root node of tntnet.xml should be
tntnet while it is not checked. Most of the settings are just single
values. They are described here in alphabetical order.
This section describes the variables, used by Tntnet (8).
- <accessLog>filename</accessLog>
- Writes a log entry for each request in a common format. This format is
compatible with most log file analyze systems for http servers.
- The log file has the fields: peer-ip - username
[time] "http-method query-string
HTTP/major-version.minor-version"
http-return-code content-size "referer"
"user-agent"
- The username, referer and user-agent may be '-' when
the value is not available. Also the content-size can be empty in
some cases.
- Example
<accessLog>/var/log/tntnet/access.log</accessLog
<bufferSize>bytes</bufferSize>
- Specifies the number of bytes sent in a single system-call. This does not
limit anything in application-level. It does not affect e.g. savepoints or
exception-handling. Component-output is collected completely and then
passed in chunks of bufferSize bytes to the operating system.
- The default value is 16384.
<compPath> [
<entry>path1</entry> ]
</compPath>
- compPath specifies, where tntnet should search for webapplications.
Tntnet searches first in the current directory and then in each directory,
you specify here, until a library is found. You can repeat the directive
as many times as desired to add more entries. If it is not found, the next
mappings entry is tried.
- Example
<compPath>
<entry>/usr/local/lib/tntnet</entry>
<entry>/usr/local/share/tntnet</entry>
</compPath>
<chroot>directory</chroot>
- Does a chroot(2)-system call on startup, which locks the process
into the directory at system-level.
- Example
<chroot>/var/tntnet</chroot>
<daemon>0|1</daemon>
- If this flag is set to 1, Tntnet forks at startup and terminates the
parent-process on successful initialization.
<dir>directory</dir>
- Changes the current working directory of the process on startup.
- Example
<enableCompression>yes|no</enableCompression>
- Specifies, if Tntnet should use gzip-compression at http-level. By default
Tntnet use compression. A http-client like a web browser can send a header
"Accept-Encoding", to tell Tntnet, that it would accept
compressed data. Tntnet then can decide, if it use compression. When the
body is complete, Tntnet tries to compress the body. If the data can be
compressed by more than 10%, Tntnet sends this compressed data. With this
flag, this feature can be turned off.
- Compression slows down processing but reduces the network-load. Normally
the size of html-pages can be compressed by about 70%, while Tntnet slows
down by up to 30%.
- Example
<enableCompression>no</enableCompression>
<errorLog>filename</errorLog>
- Redirects stderr to the specified file when tntnet runs as a daemon. If
ErrorLog is not set stderr is redirected to /dev/null.
- Example
<errorLog>/var/log/tntnet/error.log</errorLog>
<group>unix-group-id</group>
- Changes the group under which tntnet runs.
- The user is changes using the system call setgid(2), which is only
allowed, when tntnet starts as root user.
- Example
<group>tntnet-group</group>
<keepAliveTimeout>milliseconds</keepAliveTimeout>
- Sets the timeout for keep-alive requests.
- Tntnet tries to do keep-alive-requests wherever possible. This has the
effect, that tntnet can receive multiple requests within a single
tcp-connection. The connection times out after KeepAliveTimeout
milliseconds. The timeout defaults to 15000ms.
- Example
<keepAliveTimeout>300000</keepAliveTimeout>
<keepAliveMax>number</keepAliveMax>
- Sets the maximum number of request per tcp-connection. This defaults to
100.
- Example
<keepAliveTimeout>10</keepAliveTimeout>
<listeners>listener
definition</listeners>
- Specifies, on which local interfaces tntnet waits for connections. There
can be more than one Listen-directives, in which case tntnet waits on
every address.
- See separate section Listeners
<logging>listener
definition</logging>
- Configures logging. See separate section logging
<listenRetry>number</listenRetry>
- On startup Tntnet calls listen on the specified port. When the systemcall
returns with an error, Tntnet tries again and fails after the specified
number of attempts.
- The default number is 5.
- Example
<listenRetry>10</listenRetry>
<listenBacklog>number</listenBacklog>
- The system-call listen(3p) needs a parameter backlog, which
specifies, how many pending connections the operating-system should queue
before it starts to ignore new request. The value is configurable
here.
- The default value is 16.
- Example
<ListenBacklog>64</ListenBacklog>
<mappings>urlmappings</mappings>
- This is the most important setting for tntnet. It specifies, which
components schould be called on which urls.
- For details see the section Url mapping.
<maxUrlMapCache>number</maxUrlMapCache>
- Mapping urls to components is done using regular expressions. Executing
these expressions is quite expensive while the number of different urls is
quite limited in typical web applications. Hence tntnet caches the
results.
- The caching algorithm is very simple. Tntnet just collects the results in
a map. When the maximum size of the list is reached, it is cleared. This
makes management of the cache very cheap.
- This setting sets the maximum number of entries in the map.
- If you see frequently a warning message, that the cache is cleared, you
may consider increasing the size.
- The default value is 8192.
- Example
<maxUrlMapCache>32768</maxUrlMapCache>
<maxRequestSize>number</maxRequestSize>
- This directive limits the size of the request. After number Bytes
the connection is just closed. This prevents denial-of-service-attacks
through long requests. Every request is read into memory, so it must fit
into it. Bear in mind, that if you use file-upload-fields a request might
be larger than just a few bytes.
- The value defaults to 0, which means, that there is no limit at all.
- Example
<maxRequestSize>65536</maxRequestSize>
<maxRequestTime>seconds</maxRequestTime>
- In daemon mode tntnet has a watchdog, which restarts tntnet when the
maximum request time is exceeded. This happens, when a request is in a
endless loop or otherwise hangs. Restarting tntnet looses all active
sessions and the currently running requests. Therefore the timeout should
be well long enough for the longes request.
- The default value is 600 seconds, which is normally much longer than a
http request should run. If the Timeout is set to 0, the watchdog is
deactivated.
- Example
<maxRequestTime>1200</maxRequestTime>
<minThreads>number</minThreads>
- Tntnet uses a dynamic pool of worker-threads, which wait for incoming
requests. MinThreads specifies, how many worker threads there have to be.
This defaults to 5.
- Example
<minThreads>10</minThreads>
<minCompressSize>number</minCompressSize>
- Http-compression for replies smaller than this are not compressed at
all.
- The default value for this is 1024.
- Example
<minCompressSize>256</minCompressSize>
<mimeDb>filename</mimeDb>
- Specify filename for mime db. The default is /etc/mime.types.
- The format of the file is just like this /etc/mime.types. A mime type is
followed after white space by a list of file extensions delimited by white
space.
<maxThreads>number</maxThreads>
- Tntnet uses a dynamic pool of worker-threads, which wait for incoming
requests. maxThreads limits the number of threads.
- The default is 100.
- Example
<maxThreads>200</maxThreads>
<pidfile>filename</pidfile>
- When run in daemon-mode, tntnet writes the process-id of the
monitor-process to filename. When the monitor-process is deactivated, the
pid of the worker-process is written. This ensures, that sending a sigkill
to the the stored process-id stops tntnet.
- Example
<pidfile>/var/run/tntnet.pid</pidfile>
<queueSize>number</queueSize>
- Tntnet has a request-queue, where new requests wait for service. This sets
a maximum size of this queue, after wich new requests are not
accepted.
- The default value is 1000.
- Example
<queueSize>50</queueSize>
<sessionTimeout>seconds</sessionTimeout>
- This sets the number of seconds without requests after which a sesssion is
timed out.
- The default value is 300 seconds.
- Example
<sessionTimeout>600</sessionTimeout>
<socketReadTimeout>milliseconds</socketReadTimeout>
- A worker-thread waits for some milliseconds on incoming data. If there is
no data, the job is put into a queue and another thread waits with
poll(2) on incoming data on multiple sockets. The workerthreads are
freed and they can respond to other requests quickly. The default value is
10 milliseconds, which is good for normal operation. A value of 0 results
in non-blocking read. If timeout is reached, this does not mean, that the
socket is closed. A small timeout reduces contextswitches on slow
connections.
- Example
<socketReadTimeout>0</socketReadTimeout>
<socketWriteTimeout>milliseconds</socketWriteTimeout>
- This defines the time, how long the workerthreads wait on write. If the
timeout is exceeded, the socket is closed and the browser might not get
all data. The default value is 10000 milliseconds.
- Example
<socketWriteTimeout>20000</socketWriteTimeout>
<threadStartDelay>ms</threadStartDelay>
- When additional worker threads are needed tntnet waits the number of
milliseconds before it starts additional threads to prevent high load when
starting many threads at once.
- The default value is 10ms.
- Example
<threadStartDelay>1000</threadStartDelay>
<user>username</user>
- Changes the user under which tntnet answers requests.
- The user is changes using the system call setuid(2), which is only
allowed, when tntnet starts as root user.
- Example
Tntnet is a web server, which receives http requests from a http
client and answers them. A http request has a url and other attributes,
which are used to decide, how the answer should look like. This is done my
mapping urls to components.
A component is something, which generates a http reply. They are
normally generated with the ecpp compiler ecppc(1). The ecppc
compiler generated C++ classes with component names. The classes are
compiled and linked into a shared library. Both the component name and the
shared library name is needed to identify a component.
The component identifier is a string built from the component
name, the @ character and the shared library name. A example is
myclass@myapplication. This tells tntnet: load shared library
myapplication and call the component with the name myclass in
that library, which creates the reply to the request.
To tell tntnet, which component to call, url mappings must be
configured.
Configuration is done in the xml section <mappings>.
Multiple mappings can be configured there. A mapping has a condition and a
target. Tntnet looks in the list of mappings for the first mapping, where
the condition is met and uses that to call the component. The component may
return either a reply - then the request is done or a special value
DECLINED, which tells tntnet to continue in the list and look for the
next mapping, where the condition is met.
The component, which returns DECLINED may already have
generated part of the request. This is preserved for the next mapping. A
common use case is to write a special component, which just checks the user
name and password. If the user name and password is valid, DECLINED
is returned and tntnet calls the next mapping where the condition is
met.
Also when the condition is met, but the component could not be
loaded, tntnet continues with the next mapping.
When the end of the list is reached and no mapping returned a http
reply code, tntnet replies with http not found (404) error.
So how these mapping are specified then?
The mapping contains 3 kind of nodes:
- conditions
- Multiple conditions can be specified. All conditions must be met when the
mapping is to be used.
- The most important is <url>, which contains a extended
regular expression (see regex(7) for details). This expression is
checked against the url of the request. If the url tag is omitted, the
mapping is used for every url.
- The condition <vhost> specifies the virtual host, for which
this mapping is valid. When this is specified, the mapping is only valid
for requests, where the virtual host matches the setting. The value is
also a extended regular expression. Note, that a dot matches any character
in regular expressions, which may be irritating here. If you want to
specify a mapping for the all hosts of the domain tntnet.org, you
have to set <vhost>tntnet\.org$</vhost>. Also the
dollar sign at the end is important, since it matches the end of the
string. Otherwise the mapping would be also valid for a virtual host like
tntnet.org.foo.com, which may not be what you meant.
- The condition method specifies the http method for which the
mapping should be considered. Again a extended regular expression is
used.
- The condition ssl is a boolean value. The value should be 0 or 1.
The setting checks, whether this mapping should be used depending on ssl.
If the value is 1, the condition is met, when the request is sent via ssl.
If the value is 0, the condition is met, when the request is sent without
ssl.
- target
- The mapping node contains a node <target>, which contains the
component name, which is to be called when the conditions are met.
- The target may contain back references to the regular expression in the
<url> condition. Parts of the regular expression may be in
brackets. In the target $1 is replaced with the first bracketed
expression, $2 with the second and so on.
- This node is mandatory.
- parameters
- When the condition is met, additional parameters may be passed to the
called component. There are 2 nodes for this.
- The node <pathinfo> can be requested in the component using
request.getPathInfo(). If the node is not set, the url is set as
path info.
- The node <args> contains additional parameters, which can be
passed to the component. The node can have any number of nodes with
values. The tags are used as a parameter name and the content as the
value. The method request.getArg(name) returns the
value of the specified name. When the node is not set, the method
returns a empty string. Optionally a diffrent default value can be passed
to the method as an additional parameter like
request.getArg(name,defaultValue).
- For compatibility reasons with older tntnet request.getArg accepts
a numeric argument. Previously the arguments did not have names but were
accessed by index. To emulate this, request.getArg with a numeric
argument translates the number into the name
"argnumber". So accessing
request.getArg(2) returns the value of the argument
with the name arg2. Accessing a numeric argument equal or greater
than the number of arguments (the first is number 0) used to be not
allowed. Now a empty string is returned.
Example
<mappings>
<!-- map / to index@myapp -->
<mapping>
<target>index@myapp</target>
<url>^/$</url>
<pathinfo>index.html</pathinfo>
</mapping>
<!-- map /comp.* or /comp to comp@myapp -->
<mapping>
<target>action@myapp</target>
<url></url> <!-- any url -->
<method>POST</method> <!-- but only on method POST -->
<vhost>localhost</vhost> <!-- and host header must be localhost -->
<ssl>1</ssl> <!-- and ssl is enabled -->
</mapping>
<mapping>
<target>$1@myapp</target>
<url>^/([^.]+)(\.(.+))?</url>
<args>
<extension>$2</extension>
</args>
</mapping>
</mappings>
The section <listeners> specifies the ip addresses
and ports, where tntnet waits for incoming requests. Multiple listeners may
be defined, when tntnet should listen on multiple ip addresses or ports.
Each listener is defined in a node <listener>. A
listener must have a subnode <ip> and <port>. The
node <ip> may contain a ip address or hostname or may be left
empty. If the node is empty, any interface is used. The <port>
must contain the numeric port number.
The ip address may be a IPv4 or IPv6 address.
Optionally a tag <certificate> may be added. This
enables ssl on the interface and specifies the ssl host certificate for the
interface. Note that tntnet can be built without ssl support. In that case
the certificate is just ignored and unencrypted http is used here.
Example
<listeners>
<listener>
<ip></ip>
<port>80</port>
</listener>
<listener>
<ip></ip>
<port>443</port>
<!-- a certificate enables ssl -->
<certificate>tntnet.pem</certificate>
</listener>
</listeners>