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165 lines
5.0 KiB
HTML
165 lines
5.0 KiB
HTML
{% extends "frame.html" %}
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{% block body %}
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<div class="page-header">
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<h1>
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pathod
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<small>A pathological web daemon.</small>
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</h1>
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</div>
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<p>Pathod is a pathological HTTP daemon designed to let you craft almost any
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conceivable HTTP response, including ones that creatively violate the
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standards. HTTP responses are specified using a <a href="/docs/language">small,
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terse language</a>, which pathod shares with its evil twin <a
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href="/docs/pathoc">pathoc</a>. </p>
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<section>
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<div class="page-header">
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<h1>Getting started</h1>
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</div>
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<p> To start playing with pathod, simply fire up the daemon: </p>
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<pre class="terminal">./pathod</pre>
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<p>By default, the service listens on port 9999 of localhost. Pathod's
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documentation is self-hosting, and the pathod daemon exposes an interface that
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lets you play with the specifciation language, preview what responses and
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requests would look like on the wire, and view internal logs. To access all of
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this, just fire up your browser, and point it to the following URL:</p>
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<pre class="example">http://localhost:9999</pre>
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<p>The default crafting anchor point is the path <b>/p/</b>. Anything after
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this URL prefix is treated as a response specifier. So, hitting the following
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URL will generate an HTTP 200 response with 100 bytes of random data:</p>
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<pre class="example">http://localhost:9999/p/200:b@100</pre>
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<p>See the <a href="/docs/language">language documentation</a> to get (much)
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fancier. The pathod daemon also takes a range of configuration options. To view
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those, use the command-line help:</p>
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<pre class="terminal">./pathod --help</pre>
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</section>
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<section>
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<div class="page-header">
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<h1>Acting as a proxy</h1>
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</div>
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<p>Pathod automatically responds to both straight HTTP and proxy requests. For
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proxy requests, the upstream host is ignored, and the path portion of the URL
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is used to match anchors. This lets you test software that supports a proxy
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configuration by spoofing responses from upstream servers.</p>
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<p>By default, we treat all proxy CONNECT requests as HTTPS traffic, serving
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the response using either pathod's built-in certificates, or the cert/key pair
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specified by the user. You can over-ride this behaviour if you're testing a
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client that makes a non-SSL CONNECT request using the -C command-line
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option.</p>
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</section>
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<section>
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<div class="page-header">
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<h1>Anchors</h1>
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</div>
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<p>Anchors provide an alternative to specifying the response in the URL.
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Instead, you attach a response to a pre-configured anchor point, specified with
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a regex. When a URL matching the regex is requested, the specified response is
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served.</p>
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<pre class="terminal">./pathod -a "/foo=200"</pre>
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<p>Here, "/foo" is ithe regex specifying the anchor path, and the part after
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the "=" is a response specifier.</p>
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</section>
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<section>
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<div class="page-header">
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<h1>File Access</h1>
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</div>
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<p>There are two operators in the <a href="/docs/language">language</a> that
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load contents from file - the <b>+</b> operator to load an entire request
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specification from file, and the <b>></b> value specifier. In pathod, both
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of these operators are restricted to a directory specified at startup, or
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disabled if no directory is specified:</p>
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<pre class="terminal">./pathod -d ~/staticdir"</pre>
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</section>
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<section>
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<div class="page-header">
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<h1>Internal Error Responses</h1>
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</div>
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<p>Pathod uses the non-standard 800 response code to indicate internal
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errors, to distinguish them from crafted responses. For example, a request
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to:</p>
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<pre class="example">http://localhost:9999/p/foo</pre>
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<p>... will return an 800 response because "foo" is not a valid page
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specifier.</p>
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</section>
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<section>
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<div class="page-header">
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<h1>API</h1>
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</div>
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<p>pathod exposes a simple API, intended to make it possible to drive and
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inspect the daemon remotely for use in unit testing and the like. </p>
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<table class="table table-bordered">
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<tbody >
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<tr>
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<td>
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/api/clear_log
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</td>
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<td>
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A POST to this URL clears the log buffer.
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</td>
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</tr>
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<tr>
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<td>
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/api/info
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</td>
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<td>
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Basic version and configuration info.
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</td>
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</tr>
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<tr>
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<td>
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/api/log
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</td>
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<td>
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Returns the current log buffer. At the moment the buffer size is 500 entries -
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when the log grows larger than this, older entries are discarded. The returned
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data is a JSON dictionary, with the form:
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<pre>{ 'log': [ ENTRIES ] } </pre>
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You can preview the JSON data returned for a log entry through the built-in web
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interface.
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</td>
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</tr>
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</tbody>
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</table>
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</section>
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{% endblock %}
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