307 lines
12 KiB
Markdown
307 lines
12 KiB
Markdown
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---
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title: How to create static HTTP server in Node.JS?
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date: 2023-07-10 02:53:17
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tags:
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- http
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- node.js
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- javascript
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- server
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categories: Tips
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---
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Node.JS is a event driven server-side JavaScript runtime, that uses V8 JS Engine (same as Chromium) and executes code outside a web browser.
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In this article we will cover basics of implementation of HTTP server in Node.JS and build a simple static HTTP server.
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## Prerequisites
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- Node.JS installed on your developement machine
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## Built-in HTTP module
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Node.JS has built-in `http` module, which allows Node.JS to communicate over HyperText Transfer Protocol (HTTP).
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To include that module, we use `require()` method:
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var http = require("http");
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## "Hello, World" server
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In this example, the server sends "Hello, World" response. This server is listening at port 8080:
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{% codeblock server.js lang:javascript %}
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//Hello World server
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var http = require("http");
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var port = 8080;
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var server = http.createServer(function (req, res) {
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res.writeHead(200, "OK", {
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"Content-Type": "text/plain"
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});
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res.write("Hello, World!");
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res.end();
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});
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server.listen(port, function() {
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console.log("Started server at port " + port + ".");
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});
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{% endcodeblock %}
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For creating HTTP server object we use `http.createServer()` method. Server will then listen at port 8080. This server writes header indicating, that we're sending plain text. Then it sends "Hello, World" message and ends the connection.
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Save the code above in a file called *server.js* and start the server using `node server.js`.
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If you visit *localhost:8080* in your web browser, the result will look like this:
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![Hello World server](/images/hello-server.png)
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## Serving files using Node.JS
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For reading files, we're using `fs` module and `fs.readFile()` method.
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The code will look like this:
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{% codeblock server.js lang:javascript %}
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//Serving index...
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var http = require("http");
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var fs = require("fs");
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var port = 8080;
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var server = http.createServer(function (req, res) {
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fs.readFile("index.html", function(err, data) {
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if(err) {
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res.writeHead(500, "Internal Server Error", {
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"Content-Type": "text/plain"
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});
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res.end("500 Internal Server Error! Reason: " + err.message);
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} else {
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res.writeHead(200, "OK", {
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"Content-Type": "text/html"
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});
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res.end(data);
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}
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});
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});
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server.listen(port, function() {
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console.log("Started server at port " + port + ".");
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});
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{% endcodeblock %}
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This code will serve *index.html* file, and returns 500 error if there was a problem reading that file.
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But what if that index file doesn't exist? We will then need to serve 404 error page:
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{% codeblock server.js lang:javascript %}
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//Serving 404...
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var http = require("http");
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var fs = require("fs");
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var port = 8080;
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var server = http.createServer(function (req, res) {
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fs.readFile("index.html", function(err, data) {
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if(err) {
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if(err.code == "ENOENT") {
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//ENOENT means "File doesn't exist"
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res.writeHead(404, "Not Found", {
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"Content-Type": "text/plain"
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});
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res.end("404 Not Found");
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} else {
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res.writeHead(500, "Internal Server Error", {
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"Content-Type": "text/plain"
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});
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res.end("500 Internal Server Error! Reason: " + err.message);
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}
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} else {
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res.writeHead(200, "OK", {
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"Content-Type": "text/html"
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});
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res.end(data);
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}
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});
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});
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server.listen(port, function() {
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console.log("Started server at port " + port + ".");
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});
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{% endcodeblock %}
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Note, that in static HTTPS servers, files are determined from resource URL.
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{% codeblock server.js lang:javascript %}
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//WARNING!!! PATH TRAVERSAL
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var http = require("http");
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var fs = require("fs");
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var port = 8080;
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var server = http.createServer(function (req, res) {
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var filename = "." + req.url;
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if(req.url == "/") filename = "./index.html";
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fs.readFile(filename, function(err, data) {
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if(err) {
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if(err.code == "ENOENT") {
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//ENOENT means "File doesn't exist"
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res.writeHead(404, "Not Found", {
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"Content-Type": "text/plain"
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});
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res.end("404 Not Found");
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} else {
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res.writeHead(500, "Internal Server Error", {
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"Content-Type": "text/plain"
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});
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res.end("500 Internal Server Error! Reason: " + err.message);
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}
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} else {
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res.writeHead(200, "OK", {
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"Content-Type": "text/html"
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});
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res.end(data);
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}
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});
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});
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server.listen(port, function() {
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console.log("Started server at port " + port + ".");
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});
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{% endcodeblock %}
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But we have introduced path traversal vulnerability! (being able to access file outside the web root) To mitigate that, we'll use a regular expression, that removes all dot-dot-slash sequences from file name:
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{% codeblock server.js lang:javascript %}
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//Path traversal mitigated
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var http = require("http");
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var fs = require("fs");
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var port = 8080;
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var server = http.createServer(function (req, res) {
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var filename = "." + req.url;
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if(req.url == "/") filename = "./index.html";
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filename = filename.replace(/\\/g,"/").replace(/(?:\/|^)\.\.(?=(\/|$))/g,"$1").replace(/\/+/g,"/"); //Poor mans URL sanitizer
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fs.readFile(filename, function(err, data) {
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if(err) {
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if(err.code == "ENOENT") {
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//ENOENT means "File doesn't exist"
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res.writeHead(404, "Not Found", {
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"Content-Type": "text/plain"
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});
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res.end("404 Not Found");
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} else {
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res.writeHead(500, "Internal Server Error", {
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"Content-Type": "text/plain"
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});
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res.end("500 Internal Server Error! Reason: " + err.message);
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}
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} else {
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res.writeHead(200, "OK", {
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"Content-Type": "text/html"
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});
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res.end(data);
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}
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});
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});
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server.listen(port, function() {
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console.log("Started server at port " + port + ".");
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});
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{% endcodeblock %}
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That might work fine for HTML files, but if you try other files, there will be content type mismatch. To get MIME types, we use `mime-types` package, that you can install using `npm install mime-types`. We will then use that module, along with `path` module to get file extension. The code will look like this:
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{% codeblock server.js lang:javascript %}
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//Adding MIME type support...
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var http = require("http");
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var fs = require("fs");
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var mime = require("mime-types");
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var path = require("path");
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var port = 8080;
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var server = http.createServer(function (req, res) {
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var filename = "." + req.url;
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if(req.url == "/") filename = "./index.html";
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filename = filename.replace(/\\/g,"/").replace(/(?:\/|^)\.\.(?=(\/|$))/g,"$1").replace(/\/+/g,"/"); //Poor mans URL sanitizer
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var ext = path.extname(filename).substr(1); //path.extname gives "." character, so we're using substr(1) method.
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fs.readFile(filename, function(err, data) {
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if(err) {
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if(err.code == "ENOENT") {
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//ENOENT means "File doesn't exist"
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res.writeHead(404, "Not Found", {
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"Content-Type": "text/plain"
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});
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res.end("404 Not Found");
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} else {
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res.writeHead(500, "Internal Server Error", {
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"Content-Type": "text/plain"
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});
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res.end("500 Internal Server Error! Reason: " + err.message);
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}
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} else {
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res.writeHead(200, "OK", {
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"Content-Type": mime.lookup(ext) || undefined
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});
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res.end(data);
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}
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});
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});
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server.listen(port, function() {
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console.log("Started server at port " + port + ".");
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});
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{% endcodeblock %}
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But with query strings, it will fail. To prevent that, we'll be using WHATWG URL parser (`url.parse` is now deprecated):
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{% codeblock server.js lang:javascript %}
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//And URL query...
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var http = require("http");
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var fs = require("fs");
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var mime = require("mime-types");
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var path = require("path");
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var port = 8080;
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var server = http.createServer(function (req, res) {
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var urlObject = new URL(req.url, "http://localhost");
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var filename = "." + urlObject.pathname;
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if(req.url == "/") filename = "./index.html";
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filename = filename.replace(/\\/g,"/").replace(/(?:\/|^)\.\.(?=(\/|$))/g,"$1").replace(/\/+/g,"/"); //Poor mans URL sanitizer
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var ext = path.extname(filename).substr(1); //path.extname gives "." character, so we're using substr(1) method.
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fs.readFile(filename, function(err, data) {
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if(err) {
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if(err.code == "ENOENT") {
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//ENOENT means "File doesn't exist"
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res.writeHead(404, "Not Found", {
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"Content-Type": "text/plain"
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});
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res.end("404 Not Found");
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} else {
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res.writeHead(500, "Internal Server Error", {
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"Content-Type": "text/plain"
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});
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res.end("500 Internal Server Error! Reason: " + err.message);
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}
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} else {
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res.writeHead(200, "OK", {
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"Content-Type": mime.lookup(ext) || undefined
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});
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res.end(data);
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}
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});
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});
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server.listen(port, function() {
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console.log("Started server at port " + port + ".");
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});
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{% endcodeblock %}
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It's nearly finished! But encoded URLs will not work. To fix that, we will use `decodeURIComponent()` method:
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{% codeblock server.js lang:javascript %}
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//And URL decoding...
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var http = require("http");
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var fs = require("fs");
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var mime = require("mime-types");
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var path = require("path");
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var port = 8080;
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var server = http.createServer(function (req, res) {
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var urlObject = new URL(req.url, "http://localhost");
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var filename = "";
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try {
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filename = "." + decodeURIComponent(urlObject.pathname);
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} catch(ex) {
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//Malformed URI means bad request.
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res.writeHead(400, "Bad Request", {
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"Content-Type": "text/plain"
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});
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res.end("400 Bad Request");
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return;
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}
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if(req.url == "/") filename = "./index.html";
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filename = filename.replace(/\\/g,"/").replace(/(?:\/|^)\.\.(?=(\/|$))/g,"$1").replace(/\/+/g,"/"); //Poor mans URL sanitizer
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var ext = path.extname(filename).substr(1); //path.extname gives "." character, so we're using substr(1) method.
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fs.readFile(filename, function(err, data) {
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if(err) {
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if(err.code == "ENOENT") {
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//ENOENT means "File doesn't exist"
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res.writeHead(404, "Not Found", {
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"Content-Type": "text/plain"
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});
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res.end("404 Not Found");
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} else {
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res.writeHead(500, "Internal Server Error", {
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"Content-Type": "text/plain"
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});
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res.end("500 Internal Server Error! Reason: " + err.message);
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}
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} else {
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res.writeHead(200, "OK", {
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"Content-Type": mime.lookup(ext) || undefined
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});
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res.end(data);
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}
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});
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});
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server.listen(port, function() {
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console.log("Started server at port " + port + ".");
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});
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{% endcodeblock %}
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We have now very simple HTTP static server, serving at *localhost:8080*.
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**Wait... Did we forget about [SVR.JS](https://svrjs.duckdns.org)?** SVR.JS is a web server running on Node.JS, that supports not only static file serving, but also directory listings, path rewriting, complete URL sanitation, HTTPS, HTTP/2.0, expandability via mods and server-side JavaScript, and it's configurable.
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