require 'yaml' require 'etc' module Mongrel # Implements a simple DSL for configuring a Mongrel server for your # purposes. More used by framework implementers to setup Mongrel # how they like, but could be used by regular folks to add more things # to an existing mongrel configuration. # # It is used like this: # # require 'mongrel' # config = Mongrel::Configurator.new :host => "127.0.0.1" do # listener :port => 3000 do # uri "/app", :handler => Mongrel::DirHandler.new(".", load_mime_map("mime.yaml")) # end # run # end # # This will setup a simple DirHandler at the current directory and load additional # mime types from mimy.yaml. The :host => "127.0.0.1" is actually not # specific to the servers but just a hash of default parameters that all # server or uri calls receive. # # When you are inside the block after Mongrel::Configurator.new you can simply # call functions that are part of Configurator (like server, uri, daemonize, etc) # without having to refer to anything else. You can also call these functions on # the resulting object directly for additional configuration. # # A major thing about Configurator is that it actually lets you configure # multiple listeners for any hosts and ports you want. These are kept in a # map config.listeners so you can get to them. # # * :pid_file => Where to write the process ID. class Configurator attr_reader :listeners attr_reader :defaults attr_reader :needs_restart # You pass in initial defaults and then a block to continue configuring. def initialize(defaults={}, &blk) @listener = nil @listener_name = nil @listeners = {} @defaults = defaults @needs_restart = false @pid_file = defaults[:pid_file] if blk cloaker(&blk).bind(self).call end end # Change privilege of the process to specified user and group. def change_privilege(user, group) begin if group log "Changing group to #{group}." Process::GID.change_privilege(Etc.getgrnam(group).gid) end if user log "Changing user to #{user}." Process::UID.change_privilege(Etc.getpwnam(user).uid) end rescue Errno::EPERM log "FAILED to change user:group #{user}:#{group}: #$!" exit 1 end end # Writes the PID file but only if we're on windows. def write_pid_file if RUBY_PLATFORM !~ /mswin/ log "Writing PID file to #{@pid_file}" open(@pid_file,"w") {|f| f.write(Process.pid) } end end # generates a class for cloaking the current self and making the DSL nicer def cloaking_class class << self self end end # Do not call this. You were warned. def cloaker(&blk) cloaking_class.class_eval do define_method :cloaker_, &blk meth = instance_method( :cloaker_ ) remove_method :cloaker_ meth end end # This will resolve the given options against the defaults. # Normally just used internally. def resolve_defaults(options) options.merge(@defaults) end # Starts a listener block. This is the only one that actually takes # a block and then you make Configurator.uri calls in order to setup # your URIs and handlers. If you write your Handlers as GemPlugins # then you can use load_plugins and plugin to load them. # # It expects the following options (or defaults): # # * :host => Host name to bind. # * :port => Port to bind. # * :num_processors => The maximum number of concurrent threads allowed. (950 default) # * :timeout => 1/100th of a second timeout between requests. (10 is 1/10th, 0 is timeout) # * :user => User to change to, must have :group as well. # * :group => Group to change to, must have :user as well. # def listener(options={},&blk) raise "Cannot call listener inside another listener block." if (@listener or @listener_name) ops = resolve_defaults(options) ops[:num_processors] ||= 950 ops[:timeout] ||= 0 @listener = Mongrel::HttpServer.new(ops[:host], ops[:port].to_i, ops[:num_processors].to_i, ops[:timeout].to_i) @listener_name = "#{ops[:host]}:#{ops[:port]}" @listeners[@listener_name] = @listener if ops[:user] and ops[:group] change_privilege(ops[:user], ops[:group]) end # Does the actual cloaking operation to give the new implicit self. if blk cloaker(&blk).bind(self).call end # all done processing this listener setup, reset implicit variables @listener = nil @listener_name = nil end # Called inside a Configurator.listener block in order to # add URI->handler mappings for that listener. Use this as # many times as you like. It expects the following options # or defaults: # # * :handler => HttpHandler -- Handler to use for this location. # * :in_front => true/false -- Rather than appending, it prepends this handler. def uri(location, options={}) ops = resolve_defaults(options) @listener.register(location, ops[:handler], ops[:in_front]) end # Daemonizes the current Ruby script turning all the # listeners into an actual "server" or detached process. # You must call this *before* frameworks that open files # as otherwise the files will be closed by this function. # # Does not work for Win32 systems (the call is silently ignored). # # Requires the following options or defaults: # # * :cwd => Directory to change to. # * :log_file => Where to write STDOUT and STDERR. # # It is safe to call this on win32 as it will only require the daemons # gem/library if NOT win32. def daemonize(options={}) ops = resolve_defaults(options) # save this for later since daemonize will hose it if RUBY_PLATFORM !~ /mswin/ require 'daemons/daemonize' logfile = ops[:log_file] if logfile[0].chr != "/" logfile = File.join(ops[:cwd],logfile) if not File.exist?(File.dirname(logfile)) log "!!! Log file directory not found at full path #{File.dirname(logfile)}. Update your configuration to use a full path." exit 1 end end Daemonize.daemonize(logfile) # change back to the original starting directory Dir.chdir(ops[:cwd]) else log "WARNING: Win32 does not support daemon mode." end end # Uses the GemPlugin system to easily load plugins based on their # gem dependencies. You pass in either an :includes => [] or # :excludes => [] setting listing the names of plugins to include # or exclude from the when determining the dependencies. def load_plugins(options={}) ops = resolve_defaults(options) load_settings = {} if ops[:includes] ops[:includes].each do |plugin| load_settings[plugin] = GemPlugin::INCLUDE end end if ops[:excludes] ops[:excludes].each do |plugin| load_settings[plugin] = GemPlugin::EXCLUDE end end GemPlugin::Manager.instance.load(load_settings) end # Easy way to load a YAML file and apply default settings. def load_yaml(file, default={}) default.merge(YAML.load_file(file)) end # Loads the MIME map file and checks that it is correct # on loading. This is commonly passed to Mongrel::DirHandler # or any framework handler that uses DirHandler to serve files. # You can also include a set of default MIME types as additional # settings. See Mongrel::DirHandler for how the MIME types map # is organized. def load_mime_map(file, mime={}) # configure any requested mime map mime = load_yaml(file, mime) # check all the mime types to make sure they are the right format mime.each {|k,v| log "WARNING: MIME type #{k} must start with '.'" if k.index(".") != 0 } return mime end # Loads and creates a plugin for you based on the given # name and configured with the selected options. The options # are merged with the defaults prior to passing them in. def plugin(name, options={}) ops = resolve_defaults(options) GemPlugin::Manager.instance.create(name, ops) end # Let's you do redirects easily as described in Mongrel::RedirectHandler. # You use it inside the configurator like this: # # redirect("/test", "/to/there") # simple # redirect("/to", /t/, 'w') # regexp # redirect("/hey", /(w+)/) {|match| ...} # block # def redirect(from, pattern, replacement = nil, &block) uri from, :handler => Mongrel::RedirectHandler.new(pattern, replacement, &block) end # Works like a meta run method which goes through all the # configured listeners. Use the Configurator.join method # to prevent Ruby from exiting until each one is done. def run @listeners.each {|name,s| s.run } $mongrel_sleeper_thread = Thread.new { loop { sleep 1 } } end # Calls .stop on all the configured listeners so they # stop processing requests (gracefully). By default it # assumes that you don't want to restart. def stop(needs_restart=false) @listeners.each {|name,s| s.stop } @needs_restart = needs_restart end # This method should actually be called *outside* of the # Configurator block so that you can control it. In other words # do it like: config.join. def join @listeners.values.each {|s| s.acceptor.join } end # Calling this before you register your URIs to the given location # will setup a set of handlers that log open files, objects, and the # parameters for each request. This helps you track common problems # found in Rails applications that are either slow or become unresponsive # after a little while. # # You can pass an extra parameter *what* to indicate what you want to # debug. For example, if you just want to dump rails stuff then do: # # debug "/", what = [:rails] # # And it will only produce the log/mongrel_debug/rails.log file. # Available options are: :objects, :rails, :files, :threads, :params # # NOTE: Use [:files] to get accesses dumped to stderr like with WEBrick. def debug(location, what = [:objects, :rails, :files, :threads, :params]) require 'mongrel/debug' handlers = { :files => "/handlers/requestlog::access", :rails => "/handlers/requestlog::files", :objects => "/handlers/requestlog::objects", :threads => "/handlers/requestlog::threads", :params => "/handlers/requestlog::params" } # turn on the debugging infrastructure, and ObjectTracker is a pig MongrelDbg.configure # now we roll through each requested debug type, turn it on and load that plugin what.each do |type| MongrelDbg.begin_trace type uri location, :handler => plugin(handlers[type]) end end # Used to allow you to let users specify their own configurations # inside your Configurator setup. You pass it a script name and # it reads it in and does an eval on the contents passing in the right # binding so they can put their own Configurator statements. def run_config(script) open(script) {|f| eval(f.read, proc {self}) } end # Sets up the standard signal handlers that are used on most Ruby # It only configures if the platform is not win32 and doesn't do # a HUP signal since this is typically framework specific. # # Requires a :pid_file option given to Configurator.new to indicate a file to delete. # It sets the MongrelConfig.needs_restart attribute if # the start command should reload. It's up to you to detect this # and do whatever is needed for a "restart". # # This command is safely ignored if the platform is win32 (with a warning) def setup_signals(options={}) ops = resolve_defaults(options) # forced shutdown, even if previously restarted (actually just like TERM but for CTRL-C) trap("INT") { log "INT signal received."; stop(false) } # clean up the pid file always at_exit { File.unlink(@pid_file) if @pid_file and File.exists?(@pid_file) } if RUBY_PLATFORM !~ /mswin/ # graceful shutdown trap("TERM") { log "TERM signal received."; stop } trap("USR1") { log "USR1 received, toggling $mongrel_debug_client to #{!$mongrel_debug_client}"; $mongrel_debug_client = !$mongrel_debug_client } # restart trap("USR2") { log "USR2 signal received."; stop(true) } log "Signals ready. TERM => stop. USR2 => restart. INT => stop (no restart)." else log "Signals ready. INT => stop (no restart)." end end # Logs a simple message to STDERR (or the mongrel log if in daemon mode). def log(msg) STDERR.print "** ", msg, "\n" end end end