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A Ruby/Rack web server built for parallelism
04b3690a2b
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://rubyforge.org/var/svn/mongrel/trunk@356 19e92222-5c0b-0410-8929-a290d50e31e9 |
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setup.rb |
= Mongrel: Simple Fast Mostly Ruby Web Server Mongrel is a small library that provides a very fast HTTP 1.1 server for Ruby web applications. It is not particular to any framework, and is intended to be just enough to get a web application running behind a more complete and robust web server. What makes Mongrel so fast is the careful use of a C extension to provide fast HTTP 1.1 protocol parsing and fast URI lookup. This combination makes the server scream without too many portability issues. == Status Mongrel 0.3.9 now supports a fancy RubyGems based plugin system called GemPlugin. It uses the basic machinery of RubyGems to implement dynamically loaded plugins based on dependencies. Writing a plugin is pretty easy, but right now it's not as well documented as it should be. There is a simple example plugin for adding a status command to your mongrel. Just do: > gem install mongrel_status And you'll then get a new status command. Then just do: > cd myrailsapp > mongrel_rails start -d > mongrel_rails status And it'll print out the PID your Rails app is running under. The GemPlugin project is a sub-project of Mongrel, but it's licensed under the Ruby license and is usable outside Mongrel == Quick Start After you've installed (either with gem install mongrel or via source) you should have the mongrel_rails command available in your PATH. Then you just do the following: > cd myrailsapp > mongrel_rails start This will start it in the foreground so you can play with it. It runs your application in production mode. To get help do: > mongrel_rails start -h Finally, you can then start in background mode (probably won't work in win32): > mongrel_rails start -d And you can stop it whenever you like with: > mongrel_rails stop All of which should be done from your application's directory. It writes the PID of the process you ran into log/mongrel.pid. There are also many more new options for configuring the rails runner including changing to a different directory, adding more MIME types, and setting processor threads and timeouts. === Win32 Service Support Mongrel now has support for running as a Win32 service right out of the box. The support is still rough but works well enough that we decided to release it. You can thank Luis Lavena for working on this and making it so nice. After you do the gem install, find a Rails application you want to run and do: $ mongrel_rails_service install -n myapp \ -r c:\my\path\to\myapp -p 4000 -e production $ mongrel_rails_service start -n myapp Now hit the port and poof, works. Stopping a service is simple: $ mongrel_rails_service stop -n myapp If you run into an app that's not running right, my suggestion is to run it with the regular mongrel_rails runner: $ cd c:\my\path\to\myapp $ mongrel_rails start -p 4500 Since that will spit out error messages and stuff to the console. *Use CTRL-Pause/Break to stop.* Best thing about the win32 support is that you can simply use the Windows Services in Control Panel->Admin Tools to work with it. You can also install the same Rails app as different installs. For example I've got myapp_dev, and myapp_prod and just start/stop which one I want to work with. == Install It doesn't explicitly require Camping, but if you want to run the examples/camping/ examples then you'll need to install Camping 1.2 at least (and redcloth I think). These are all available from RubyGems. The library consists of a C extension so you'll need a C compiler or at least a friend who can build it for you. Finally, the source includes a setup.rb for those who hate RubyGems. == Usage The examples/simpletest.rb file has the following code as the simplest example: require 'mongrel' class SimpleHandler < Mongrel::HttpHandler def process(request, response) response.start(200) do |head,out| head["Content-Type"] = "text/plain" out.write("hello!\n") end end end h = Mongrel::HttpServer.new("0.0.0.0", "3000") h.register("/test", SimpleHandler.new) h.register("/files", Mongrel::DirHandler.new(".")) h.run.join If you run this and access port 3000 with a browser it will say "hello!". If you access it with any url other than "/test" it will give a simple 404. Check out the Mongrel::Error404Handler for a basic way to give a more complex 404 message. This also shows the DirHandler with directory listings. This is still rough but it should work for basic hosting. *File extension to mime type mapping is missing though.* == Speed Like previous releases 0.3.1 continues the trend of making things as fast as possible. It currently might be a little slower than other releases but should hold up pretty good against at least WEBrick (especially when running Rails). As before you can control the number of processor threads (and thus ActiveRecord database connections) with: h = Mongrel::HttpServer.new("0.0.0.0", "3000", 40) Which will make 40 thread processors. Right now the optimal setting is up in the air, but 20 seemed to be about the sweet spot on my systems. The limited processors also means that you can use ActiveRecord as-is and it will create a matching database connection for each processor thread. More on this in future releases. == Contact E-mail zedshaw at zedshaw.com and I'll help. Comments about the API are welcome.