A simple HTTP serve
task for use with the boot build tool
that can serve resources, directories or a typical ring handler.
[pandeiro/boot-http "0.7.0-SNAPSHOT"] ;; latest release
(The following examples assume you have boot installed and updated.)
This serves the current directory at port 3000:
boot -d pandeiro/boot-http serve -d . wait
To inspect the meanings of the flags and other tasks, use boot's built-in documentation mechanism:
boot -d pandeiro/boot-http -h # show all tasks on the classpath
boot -d pandeiro/boot-http serve -h # show serve's usage
If you already have a build.boot
, add
pandeiro/boot-http
to :dependencies
and (require '[pandeiro.boot-http :refer :all])
.
You can use boot-http for three different use cases:
boot serve wait # or from REPL: (boot (serve) (wait))
boot serve -d target wait # or at the REPL: (boot (serve :dir "target") (wait))
That would serve the target
directory if it exists. Instead of specifying a directory,
you can also specify a ring handler:
boot serve -H myapp.server/app -R wait # (boot (serve :handler 'myapp.server/app :reload true) (wait))
You may have noticed the wait
task being used after all the
command-line invocations so far. This is because by itself, the
serve
task does not block and thus exits immediately.
What good is that? It means you can compose with other tasks.
In boot-cljs-example, for example, serve
is
invoked like so:
boot serve watch speak reload cljs-repl cljs -usO none
which is, again, the same as:
(comp (serve)
(watch)
(speak)
(reload)
(cljs-repl)
(cljs :optimizations :none))
In that case, since serve
is given a directory, it serves the directory and whatever
resources can be found on the classpath, and then gets out of the way.
Use a specific port.
boot -d pandeiro/boot-http serve -d . -p 8888 wait
Use the HTTP Kit webserver instead of Jetty.
boot -d pandeiro/boot-http serve -d . -k wait # uses httpkit
Start an nREPL server for access to the http server. Accepts
:port
and :bind
options for setting nREPL server IP
and port.
boot -d pandeiro/boot-http serve -d . -n "{:port 3001}"
Setup and teardown functions to run.
Silences all output.
Wrap provided ring handler with ring-reload.
Right now that is about it. It basically blends the functionality of
python3 -m http.server
and a subset of lein ring server
.
Feel free to add issues or comment here if you have any ideas.
The boot guys basically wrote all of this or walked me through any parts I had to change. Thanks!
Copyright © 2015 Murphy McMahon
Distributed under the Eclipse Public License either version 1.0 or (at your option) any later version.