2.0.10 • Published 7 years ago

seal-http-server v2.0.10

Weekly downloads
4
License
MIT
Repository
github
Last release
7 years ago

seal-http-server

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seal-http-server serves an Express app. It accepts local HTTP connections and HTTPS-encrypted connections from any given external interface.

Installation

$ npm install seal-http-server

Quick start

First you need to add a reference to seal-http-server within your application.

const httpServer = require('seal-http-server');

Starting the server

Create an Express app to define the routes that should be handled:

const express = require('express');
const myExpressApp = express();

myExpressApp.get('/', function(req, res){
  res.send('hello world');
});

Then, create an options object:

const options = {
  app: myExpressApp,
  host: '192.168.0.1',
  port: '3000'
};

host is the hostname or the IP address of the external interface you want the server to bind to. Regardless of the host value it will also bind to localhost. Both, local and external connections use the given port. If you ommit the property host, the address that is advertised by Consul will be used as the external interface. See Consul's docs for more information about its advertise_addr setting.

Finally, call the start function:

httpServer.start(options, (err) => {
  if (err) {
    return console.log('Starting the http server failed.');
  }

  console.log('Http server is listening', options);
});

Shutting down the server

Before you exit the application, you can perform a graceful shutdown. In this case, no new connection will be accepted by the server and the callback will be called after all already open connections are closed. Thus, no connection will be dropped by the server.

To perform a graceful shutdown, call the shutdown function:

httpServer.shutdown((err) => {
  if (err) {
    return console.log('Shutting down the http server failed.');
  }

  console.log('Http server is shut down.');
});

The only parameter is a callback function. It will be called when there are no more open connections.

Environment variables

For connections via HTTPS you can define the set of allowed ciphers by setting the environment variable TLS_CIPHERS.

TLS_UNPROTECTED controls which connections are encrypted:

  • none

    Local and external connections are encrypted via HTTPS. This is the most secure setting but decreases the performance to some extend.

  • loopback

    Local connections are served via HTTP. External connections are encrypted via HTTPS. This is the default setting.

  • world

    Local and external connections are served via HTTP. This is insecure!

Technical details

In order to handle traffic coming through the local and the given external interface(s), two server objects will be created: One binds to the local interface, the other one binds to the given external interface(s). Both servers use the same port. This also allows e.g. to use HTTP locally but to encrypt external connections via HTTPS.

For bookkeeping purposes the server objects are stored as properties of the instances variable in lib/httpServer.js.

const instances = {
  external: <external server object>,
  local: <local server object>
};

Depending on the environment variable TLS_UNPROTECTED, the server objects will be of type Http or Https.

If host in the options of the start function is set to localhost or 127.0.0.1, only the local server will be created. The instances variable will look like:

const instances = {
  local: <local server object>
};

Running the build

To build this module use roboter.

$ bot