GN Release 1.1 A Free Multi-protocol Server for Gopher and HTTP FEATURES: ( * means new in version 1.1) o Support for WAIS index searches. (See below) (*) o HTTP support -- GN serves two protocols gopher0 and HTTP/1.0, the protocol used by WWW clients. GN recognizes the protocol from the request and responds appropriately. This allows the use of WWW browsers like Mosaic in their native mode. o Per Directory Access control. o Support for structured files. o Support for compressed files. o Builtin menu hierarchy searches. o Free for any use, commercial or otherwise! (GNU license) AVAILABLE BY ANONYMOUS FTP: FTP to: ftp.acns.nwu.edu Get file pub/gn/gn-1.1.tar.Z OR VIA GOPHER: Server: hopf.math.nwu.edu port 70 Get file: gn-1.1.tar.Z You can also browse the source and documentation here. Gn is a gopher/HTTP server which is written in C and runs under UNIX. It is freely available for any use, commercial or otherwise. The software is freely redistributable under the terms of the GNU public license. There is good documentation -- three man pages and an extensive installation and maintenance guide. Gn has "per directory" access control. You can have different access (by IP address or subnet) to every directory if you want to. You don't need to run different servers on different ports to have different levels of access! Gn supports the standard text and binary types, including sound and image. Index types include programs (or shell scripts) which return "virtual directories" and also "grep" type searches. GN runs only under inetd. See the man page for details. Starting with version 1.1 the GN gopher/http protocol server has support for WAIS index searches. This means you can index a collection of files with the index software designed for use with WAIS (Wide Area Information Server) and the gn server will respond to user queries by providing a menu of those documents from your collection which contain a match for the user supplied search term. Simple boolean combinations like `horses and cows' or `fox not goose' are supported. WAIS index support is provided by means of an auxiliary program provided with the gn distribution, called waisgn. In order to use this program the server maintainer must first obtain and compile the WAIS software distribution. This provides the program waisindex which creates the indices and the libraries which must be linked with the waisgn program. When the gn server receives a WAIS index query it execs (in the UNIX sense) the waisgn program passing the search term to it. That is, it turns itself into the waisgn program by replacing the server in memory with the waisgn binary. There is no need to run a WAIS server. One reason for this design is size. The gn server is relatively small and hence fairly efficient. The server I run is about 64K in size. The waisgn program source is small but the libraries with which it must be linked are not. The final binary for waisgn is 400K to 500K in size. The design with two separate programs has several advantages. First the efficiency of servers which are not using WAIS is not degraded by its presence. Also WAIS is a complicated system to set up and run. Having it done with a separate program makes it much easier to check that things are functioning correctly and fix them if they are not. THANKS I would like to thank the many people who have aided in the creation of the GN package, either through writing code or finding and fixing bugs. They include Earle Ake, Henry Cejtin, Mike Crowley, Paul DuBois, Don Gilbert, Jishnu Mukerji, Marko Nordberg, Jim Rees, Craig Milo Rogers, Stephen Trier, Ed Vielmetti, and Rico Tudor.