I have a website, which is composed by three smaller 'independent' subsites:
Where doc
is a site created with Hugo :: A fast and modern static website engine, editor
is the mxgraph Graphditor example; and the remaining files make a hand-made landing page.
Besides deploying to any web server, I'd like to distribute the site as an 'standalone application'. To allow so, I wrote this really simple server in go:
package main
import (
flag "github.com/ogier/pflag"
"fmt"
"net/http"
"net/http/httputil"
"os"
"path/filepath"
)
var port = flag.IntP("port", "p", 80, "port to serve at")
var dir = flag.StringP("dir", "d", "./", "dir to serve from")
var verb = flag.BoolP("verbose", "v", false, "")
func init() {
flag.Parse();
}
type justFilesFilesystem struct {
fs http.FileSystem;
}
type neuteredReaddirFile struct {
http.File
}
func (fs justFilesFilesystem) Open(name string) (http.File, error) {
f, err := fs.fs.Open(name)
if err != nil { return nil, err; }
return neuteredReaddirFile{f}, nil
}
func (f neuteredReaddirFile) Readdir(count int) ([]os.FileInfo, error) {
return nil, nil;
}
func loggingHandler(h http.Handler) http.Handler {
return http.HandlerFunc(func(w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request) {
requestDump, err := httputil.DumpRequest(r, true)
if err != nil { fmt.Println(err); }
fmt.Println(string(requestDump))
h.ServeHTTP(w, r)
})
}
func main() {
str, err := filepath.Abs(*dir)
if err != nil { os.Exit(1); }
fmt.Printf("Serving at port %d from dir %s
",*port,str)
http.ListenAndServe(fmt.Sprintf(":%d",*port), loggingHandler(http.FileServer(justFilesFilesystem{http.Dir(*dir)})))
}
As a result, I can run simpleserver -d <path-to-mysite>
and browse the sites through localhost
, localhost/doc
and localhost/editor
.
Then, I'd like to use custom (sub)domain(s) such as mylocal.app
, doc.mylocal.app
and editor.mylocal.app
. So, I added the following line to my the /etc/hosts
file: 127.0.0.1 mylocal.app
. Therefore, I can browse mylocal.app
, mylocal.app/editor
and mylocal.app/doc
. Moreover, I was able to change it to mylocal.app
, mylocal.app:<editor-port>
and mylocal.app:<doc-port>
with different packages.
However, when I try to use a subdomain, it is not properly resolved, so any reverse-proxy strategy won't work. Since wildcards are not supported, I can add additional entries in the /etc/hosts
file, but I'd prefer to avoid it.
Although, an alternative solution is to run dnsmasq, I'd like to keep the application standalone. I found some equivalent golang packages. However, I feel that many features are supported which I don't really need.
Furthermore, since I don't really have to resolve any IP, but to provide an alias of localhost
, I think that a proxy could suffice. This would also be easier to configure, since the user could configure the browser only, and no system-wide modification would be required.
Yet, all the traffic from the user would be 'filtered' by my app. Is this correct? If so, can you point me to any reference to implement it in the most clean way. I know this is quite subjective, but I mean a relatively short (say 10 lines of code) snippet so that users can easily check what is going on.
EDIT
I'd like to use something like:
func main() {
mymux := http.NewServeMux()
mymux.HandleFunc("*.mylocal.app", myHandler)
mymux.HandleFunc("*", <systemDefaultHandler>)
http.ListenAndServe(":8080", mymux)
}
or
func main() {
mymux := http.NewServeMux()
mymux.HandleFunc("editor.mylocal.app", editorHandler)
mymux.HandleFunc("doc.mylocal.app", docHandler)
mymux.HandleFunc("*.mylocal.app", rootHandler)
mymux.HandleFunc("*", <systemDefaultHandler>)
http.ListenAndServe(":8080", mymux)
}
These are only snippets. A complete example is this, which was referenced in the comments by @Steve101.
However, at now, I don't know what systemDefaultHandler is. And that is not solved there.
Apart from that, @faraz suggested using goproxy. I think that the HTTP/HTTPS transparent proxy
is the default handler I am looking for. But, using a package only to do that seems excessive to me. Can I achieve the same functionality with built-in resources?
Unfortunately, there's no dead simple way to do this through Go. You'll need to intercept your system's DNS requests just like dnsmasq, and that's inevitably going to require some modification the system DNS config (/etc/resolv.conf
in Linux, /etc/resolver
on a Mac, or firewall rule) to route your DNS requests to your app. Going the DNS has the downside that you'd need to build a DNS server inside your app similar to pow.cx, which seems unnecessarily complicated.
Since mucking with system config is inevitable, I'd vote for making changes to the hosts file on boot or when a directory is added/removed (via fsnotify.) On shutdown, you can clear the added entries too.
If you're looking to isolate these changes to a specific browser instead of make a system-wide change, you could always run your application through a proxy server like goproxy and tell your browser to use that proxy for requests. For example, you can do this in Chrome through its preferences or by setting the --proxy-server
flag:
--proxy-server=<scheme>=<uri>[:<port>][;...] | <uri>[:<port>] | "direct://"
See Chrome's network settings docs for more details.
Also, if you're willing to much with browser configs, you could just use an extension to handle the requests as needed.
there is only solution that would work without proxy is that you register an domain for this and make an offical dns entry with wildcard to 127.0.0.1 like *.myApp.suche.org. So any client that resolve the ip get 127.0.0.1 and work local. this way you do not need administrator rights to modify the /etc/hosts or equivalent. If it should work behind proxy without modify the resolver (etc/hosts etc) you can provide an wpad.dat (Javascript for Proxy detection) that say for your domain all traffic goes you server and the rest to the real proxy. If this is served in you server the script can automaticaly contain the real proxy as default.