Gemini server for CGI
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README.md

Opal

Opal is a Gemini server written in Rust. It is meant to serve dynamic content through CGI and does not serve static files. In a way, it is a companion project to the Agate Gemini server which only serves static files. The project's goals are:

  • Focus on a small set of features (around CGI) but do them correctly.
  • Be nice with old/stupid hardware (TLS 1.2 is OK, be efficient, etc).
  • Don't add features unless someone actively wants them in.
  • Try to keep resources (binary size, memory, etc) under tight control.

Opal uses the openssl Rust bindings, which work with OpenSSL and LibreSSL, so it should work properly on those platforms. I currently only support Linux systems but if there is interest in other platforms let's do this together!

Opal is licensed as GPLv3.

Usage

Use opal -h to get a list of options. There is no config file, every setting can be configured from the command line.

  • -a, --address <address>: specify the address(es) to listen to.
  • -c, --cert <cert>: server certificate path.
  • -k, --key <key>: server private key path.
  • -r, --root-path <root_path>: path to CGI scripts root.
  • -e, --env <key=value>: additional environment variables for CGI scripts; this option can be used multiple times.

You can specify multiple addresses to listen to by using several -a options. Note that if you just want to listen to both IPv4 and IPv6 on any interface, listening only on [::]:1965 should suffice for systems with dual-stack enabled (default on many Linux systems, maybe not BSD).

CGI support

Opal tries to implement RFC 3875 (CGI 1.1) and provides all the required environment variables to processes. It also add a bunch of Gemini specific variables, like a lot of other servers (Gemserv, Gmid, Gmnisrv, …). The environment for the subprocess is cleaned and should only contain those variables.

Presence Variable Description
always GATEWAY_INTERFACE "CGI/1.1"
always REMOTE_ADDR Peer IP address and port
always REMOTE_HOST Same as REMOTE_ADDR
always REQUEST_METHOD Empty string for compatibility
always SCRIPT_NAME Script name part of the URL path
always SERVER_NAME Hostname used for SNI
always SERVER_PORT Port where the request has been received
always SERVER_PROTOCOL "GEMINI"
always SERVER_SOFTWARE "opal/version", e.g. "opal/0.1.0"
always GEMINI_DOCUMENT_ROOT CGI root
always GEMINI_SCRIPT_FILENAME CGI script that matched the URL path
always GEMINI_URL Full URL, normalized
always GEMINI_URL_PATH URL path, normalized
always TLS_VERSION TLS version, e.g. "TLSv1.3"
always TLS_CIPHER TLS cipher suite, e.g. "TLS_AES_256_GCM_SHA384"
optional PATH_INFO Path passed to the CGI process after the script name
optional QUERY_STRING Query string if provided, still URL-encoded
client cert AUTH_TYPE "CERTIFICATE" if one is provided
client cert REMOTE_USER Subject common name (empty if unavailable)
client cert TLS_CLIENT_ISSUER Issuer common name (empty if unavailable)
client cert TLS_CLIENT_HASH Digest of the DER reprensetation of the cert
client cert TLS_CLIENT_NOT_AFTER Validity end date, RFC 3339 format
client cert TLS_CLIENT_NOT_BEFORE Validity start date, RFC 3339 format

Opal does not provide CONTENT_LENGTH, CONTENT_TYPE, REMOTE_IDENT because they do not make much sense in Gemini. PATH_TRANSLATED is also not implemented by pure laziness.

The TLS_CLIENT_HASH is a string that starts with "SHA256:" followed by the SHA256 digest of the DER representation of the client certificate, as an uppercase hex-string.

It can be a bit confusing which variable represent what data, especially those related to the URL and the path. Take the following request as example: gemini://localhost/env/sub1/sub2?search=élément. Suppose our CGI root, in /cgi, contains the executable script named env. The variables will be:

GEMINI_DOCUMENT_ROOT=/cgi
GEMINI_SCRIPT_FILENAME=/cgi/env
GEMINI_URL=gemini://localhost/env/sub1/sub2?search=%C3%A9l%C3%A9ment
GEMINI_URL_PATH=/env/sub1/sub2
SCRIPT_NAME=/env
PATH_INFO=/sub1/sub2
QUERY_STRING=search=%C3%A9l%C3%A9ment

Roadmap

Things to consider:

  • Support SCGI; a bit more complex but should save resources on smol hardware.
  • Chroot; quite cheap and can bring a bit of peace of mind.

Things that probably won't be considered:

  • Serve static files; so many other servers to that correctly already!
  • Any kind of security mechanism that is not properly motivated.
  • FastCGI; come on…