# Mongoose Embedding Guide Embedding Mongoose is done in two steps: 1. Copy [mongoose.c](https://raw.github.com/cesanta/mongoose/master/mongoose.c) and [mongoose.h](https://raw.github.com/cesanta/mongoose/master/mongoose.h) to your application's source tree and include them in the build. 2. Somewhere in the application code, call `mg_create_server()` to create a server, configure it with `mg_set_option()` and loop with `mg_poll_server()` until done. Call `mg_destroy_server()` to cleanup. Here's a minimal application `app.c` that embeds mongoose: #include "mongoose.h" int main(void) { struct mg_server *server = mg_create_server(NULL); mg_set_option(server, "document_root", "."); mg_set_option(server, "listening_port", "8080"); for (;;) mg_poll_server(server, 1000); // Infinite loop, Ctrl-C to stop mg_destroy_server(&server); return 0; } To compile it, put `mongoose.c`, `mongoose.h` and `minimal.c` into one folder, start terminal on UNIX or Visual Studio command line prompt on Windows, and run the following command: cc app.c mongoose.c -o app # on Unix cl app.c mongoose.c /TC /MD # on Windows When run, this simple application opens port 8080 and serves static files, CGI files and lists directory content in the current working directory. Mongoose can call user-defined functions when certain URIs are requested. These functions are _called uri handlers_. `mg_add_uri_handler()` registers an URI handler, and there is no restriction exist on the number of URI handlers. Also, mongoose can call a user-defined function when it is about to send HTTP error back to client. That function is called _http error handler_ and can be registered by `mg_set_http_error_handler()`. Handlers are called by Mongoose with `struct mg_connection *` pointer as a parameter, which has all information about the request: HTTP headers, POST or websocket data buffer, etcetera. Let's extend our minimal application example and create an URI that will be served by user's C code. The app will handle `/hello` URI by showing a hello message. So, when app is run, http://127.0.0.1:8080/hello will say hello, and here's the code: #include #include "mongoose.h" static int handle_hello(struct mg_connection *conn) { static const char *reply = "Hello world!\n"; mg_write_data(conn, reply, strlen(reply)); return 1; } int main(void) { struct mg_server *server = mg_create_server(NULL); mg_set_option(server, "document_root", "."); mg_set_option(server, "listening_port", "8080"); mg_add_uri_handler(server, "/hello", &handle_hello); for (;;) mg_poll_server(server, 1000); // Infinite loop, Ctrl-C to stop mg_destroy_server(&server); return 0; } Below is the list of compilation flags that enable or disable certain features. By default, some features are enabled, and could be disabled by setting appropriate `NO_*` flag. Features that are disabled by default could be enabled by setting appropriate `USE_*` flag. Bare bones Mongoose is quite small, about 30 kilobytes of compiled x86 code. Each feature adds a couple of kilobytes to the executable size, and also has some runtime penalty. -DMONGOOSE_NO_AUTH Disable MD5 authorization support -DMONGOOSE_NO_CGI Disable CGI support -DMONGOOSE_NO_DAV Disable WebDAV support (PUT, DELETE, MKCOL, PROPFIND methods) -DMONGOOSE_NO_DIRECTORY_LISTING Disable directory listing -DMONGOOSE_NO_FILESYSTEM Disables all file IO, serving from memory only -DMONGOOSE_NO_LOGGING Disable access/error logging -DMONGOOSE_NO_THREADS -DMONGOOSE_NO_WEBSOCKET Disable WebSocket support -DMONGOOSE_USE_IDLE_TIMEOUT_SECONDS=X Idle connection timeout, default is 30 -DMONGOOSE_USE_IPV6 Enable IPv6 support -DMONGOOSE_USE_LUA Enable Lua scripting -DMONGOOSE_USE_LUA_SQLITE3 Enable sqlite3 binding for Lua -DMONGOOSE_USE_SSL Enable SSL -DMONGOOSE_USE_POST_SIZE_LIMIT=X POST requests larger than X will be rejected, not set by default -DMONGOOSE_USE_EXTRA_HTTP_HEADERS=X Append X to the HTTP headers for static files, empty by default -DMONGOOSE_USE_STACK_SIZE=X Let mg_start_thread() use stack size X, default is OS default -DMONGOOSE_ENABLE_DEBUG Enables debug messages on stdout, very noisy Mongoose source code contains a well-commented example code, listed below: * [hello.c](https://github.com/cesanta/mongoose/blob/master/examples/hello.c) a minimalistic hello world example * [post.c](https://github.com/cesanta/mongoose/blob/master/examples/post.c) shows how to handle form input * [upload.c](https://github.com/cesanta/mongoose/blob/master/examples/post.c) shows how to upload files * [websocket.c](https://github.com/cesanta/mongoose/blob/master/examples/websocket.c) demonstrates websocket usage * [auth.c](https://github.com/cesanta/mongoose/blob/master/examples/websocket.c) demonstrates API-controlled Digest authorization