3.5 KiB
Mongoose User Guide
Mongoose is small and easy to use web server built on top of mongoose library. It is designed with maximum simplicity in mind. For example, to share any directory, just drop mongoose executable file in that directory, double-click it (on UNIX, run it from shell) and launch a browser at http://localhost:8080 Note that 'localhost' should be changed to a machine's name if a folder is accessed from other computer.
On Windows and Mac, Mongoose iconifies itself to the system tray when started. Right-click on the icon pops up a menu, where it is possible to stop mongoose, or configure it.
On UNIX, mongoose
is a command line utility. Running mongoose
in
terminal, optionally followed by configuration parameters
(mongoose [OPTIONS]
) or configuration file name
(mongoose [config_file_name]
) starts the
web server:
$ mongoose -document_root /var/www # Running mongoose with cmdline options
$ mongoose /etc/my_config.txt # Running mongoose with config file
$ mongoose # Running with no parameters. This will
# serve current directory on port 8080
Mongoose does not detach from terminal. Pressing Ctrl-C
keys
stops the server.
When started, mongoose first searches for the configuration file.
If configuration file is specified explicitly in the command line, then
specified configuration file is used.
Otherwise, mongoose would search for file mongoose.conf
in the same directory
where binary is located, and use it. Configuration file can be absent.
Configuration file is a sequence of lines, each line containing
command line argument name and it's value. Empty lines and lines beginning
with #
are ignored. Here is the example of mongoose.conf
file:
# This is a comment
document_root C:\www
listening_port 80
ssl_certificate C:\mongoose\ssl_cert.pem
Command line arguments are highest priority and can override
configuration file settings. For example, if mongoose.conf
has line
document_root /var/www
, and mongoose has been started as
mongoose -document_root /etc
, then /etc
directory will be used as
document root.
Note that configuration options on the command line must start with -
,
and their names are the same as in the config file. Exampli gratia,
the following two setups are equivalent:
$ mongoose -listening_port 1234 -document_root /var/www
$ cat > mongoose.conf
listening_ports 1234
document_root /var/www
^D
$ mongoose
Mongoose can also be used to modify .htpasswd
passwords file:
$ mongoose -A .htpasswd mydomain.com user_name user_password
Unlike other web servers, mongoose does not require CGI scripts be located in a special directory. CGI scripts can be anywhere. CGI (and SSI) files are recognized by the file name pattern. Mongoose uses shell-like glob patterns. Pattern match starts at the beginning of the string, so essentially patterns are prefix patterns. Syntax is as follows:
** Matches everything
* Matches everything but slash character, '/'
? Matches any character
$ Matches the end of the string
| Matches if pattern on the left side or the right side matches.
All other characters in the pattern match themselves. Examples:
**.cgi$ Any string that ends with .cgi
/foo Any string that begins with /foo
**a$|**b$ Any string that ends with a or b
To restrict CGI files only to /cgi-bin/
directory, use this setting:
$ mongoose -cgi_pattern /cgi-bin/*.cgi # Emulate /cgi-bin/ restriction