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Agate is a server for the Gemini network protocol, built with the Rust programming language. Agate has very few features, and can only serve static files. It uses async I/O, and should be quite efficient even when running on low-end hardware and serving many concurrent requests.
Since Agate by default uses port 1965, you should be able to run other servers (like e.g. Apache or nginx) on the same device.
1. Get a binary for agate. You can use any of the below ways:
Download and unpack the [pre-compiled binary](https://github.com/mbrubeck/agate/releases).
Using the nix package manager run `nix-env -i agate`
_Note:_ agate is currently only in the unstable channel and will reach a release channel once the next release is tagged
Deploy agate with GNU Guix System by adding the agate-service-type to your system services.
see also
Install the package "agate-bin" from AUR for pre-compiled binary. Otherwise install the "agate" package from AUR to get agate compiled from source.
If you have the Rust toolchain installed, run `cargo install agate` to install agate from crates.io.
Download the source code and run `cargo build --release` inside the source repository, then find the binary at `target/release/agate`.
You can use the install script in the `tools` directory for the remaining steps if there is one for your system. If there is none, please consider contributing one to make it easier for less tech-savvy users!
2. Run the server. You can use the following arguments to specify the locations of the content directory, IP address and port to listen on, host name to expect in request URLs, and default language code to include in the MIME type for text/gemini files: (Replace the hostname `example.com` with the address of your Gemini server.)
If you have not done it yourself, Agate will generate a private key and certificate for you on the first run, using the specified hostname(s). See the section Certificates below for more.
agate --content path/to/content/ \ --addr [::]:1965 \ --addr 0.0.0.0:1965 \ --hostname example.com \ --lang en-US
All of the command-line arguments are optional. Run `agate --help` to see the default values used when arguments are omitted.
When a client requests the URL `gemini://example.com/foo/bar`, Agate will respond with the file at `path/to/content/foo/bar`. If any segment of the requested path starts with a dot, agate will respond with a status code 52, whether the file exists or not. This behaviour can be disabled with `--serve-secret` or by an entry for the specific file in the `.meta` configuration file (see Meta-Presets). If there is a directory at that path, Agate will look for a file named `index.gmi` inside that directory.
If the `--hostname` argument is used, Agate will generate keys and self signed certificates for each hostname specified. For Gemini it is recommended by the specification to use self signed certificates because Gemini uses the TOFU (Trust on first use) principle for certificates. Because of this, the generated certificates will also have a long expiration time of `4096-01-01`.
For manual configuration of keys and certificates see the section on certificates below.
Agate by default supports TLSv1.2 and TLSv1.3. You can disable support for TLSv1.2 by using the flag `--only-tls13` (or its short version `-3`). This is *NOT RECOMMENDED* as it may break compatibility with some clients. The Gemini specification requires compatibility with TLSv1.2 "for now" because not all platforms have good support for TLSv1.3 (cf. §4.1 of the specification).
You can enable a basic directory listing for a directory by putting a file called `.directory-listing-ok` in that directory. This does not have an effect on sub-directories.
This file must be UTF-8 encoded text; it may be empty. Any text in the file will be prepended to the directory listing.
The directory listing will hide files and directories whose name starts with a dot (e.g. the `.directory-listing-ok` file itself, the `.meta` configuration file, or the `..` directory).
A file called `index.gmi` will always take precedence over a directory listing.
You can put a file called `.meta` in any content directory. This file stores some metadata about the adjacent files which Agate will use when serving these files. The `.meta` file must be UTF-8 encoded.
You can also enable a central configuration file with the `-C` flag (or the long version `--central-conf`). In this case Agate will always look for the `.meta` configuration file in the content root directory and will ignore `.meta` files in other directories.
The `.meta` file has the following format [1]:
`<path>` is a case sensitive file path, which may or may not exist on disk. If <path> leads to a directory, it is ignored.
If central configuration file mode is not used, using a path that is not a file in the current directory is undefined behaviour (for example `../index.gmi` would be undefined behaviour).
You can use Unix style patterns in existing paths. For example `content/*` will match any file within `content`, and `content/**` will additionally match any files in subdirectories of `content`.
However, the `*` and `**` globs on their own will by default not match files or directories that start with a dot because of their special meaning.
This behaviour can be disabled with `--serve-secret` or by explicitly matching files starting with a dot with e.g. `content/.*` or `content/**/.*` respectively.
For more information on the patterns you can use, please see the documentation of `glob::Pattern`.
Rules can overwrite other rules, so if a file is matched by multiple rules, the last one applies.
Documentation of `glob::Pattern`.
`<metadata>` can take one of four possible forms:
1. empty:
Agate will not send a default language parameter, even if it was specified on the command line.
2. starting with a semicolon followed by MIME parameters:
Agate will append the specified string onto the MIME type, if the file is found.
3. starting with a gemini status code (i.e. a digit 1-6 inclusive followed by another digit) and a space:
Agate will send the metadata whether the file exists or not. The file will not be sent or accessed.
4. a MIME type, may include parameters:
Agate will use this MIME type instead of what it would guess, if the file is found. The default language parameter will not be used, even if it was specified on the command line.
If a line violates the format or looks like case 3, but is incorrect, it might be ignored. You should check your logs. Please know that this configuration file is first read when a file from the respective directory is accessed. So no log messages after startup does not mean the `.meta` file is okay.
Such a configuration file might look like this:
# This line will be ignored.
If this is the `.meta` file in the content root directory and the `-C` flag is used, this will result in the following response headers:
`/` or `/index.gmi` -> `20 text/gemini;lang=en-GB` `/LICENSE` -> `20 text/plain;charset=UTF-8` `/gone.gmi` -> `52 This file is no longer here, sorry.` any non-hidden file ending in `.de.gmi` (including in non-hidden subdirectories) -> `20 text/gemini;lang=de` any non-hidden file in the `nl` directory ending in `.gmi` (including in non-hidden subdirectories) -> `20 text/gemini;lang=nl`
[1] In theory the syntax is that of a typical INI-like file and also allows for sections with `[section]` (the default section is set to `mime` in the parser), since all other sections are disregarded, this does not make a difference. This also means that you can in theory also use `=` instead of `:`. For even more information, you can visit the documentation of `configparser`.
documentation of `configparser`
Agate uses the `env_logger` crate and allows you to set the logging verbosity by setting the `RUST_LOG` environment variable. To turn off all logging use `RUST_LOG=off`. For more information, please see the documentation of `env_logger`.
documentation of `env_logger` crate
Agate has basic support for virtual hosts. If you specify multiple `--hostname`s, Agate will look in a directory with the respective hostname within the content root directory.
For example if one of the hostnames is `example.com`, and the content root directory is set to the default `./content`, and `gemini://example.com/file.gmi` is requested, then Agate will look for `./content/example.com/file.gmi`. This behaviour is only enabled if multiple `--hostname`s are specified.
Agate also supports different certificates for different hostnames, see the section on certificates below.
If you want to serve the same content for multiple domains, you can instead disable the hostname check by not specifying `--hostname`. In this case Agate will disregard a request's hostname apart from checking that there is one.
When one or more `--hostname`s are specified, Agate will check that the hostnames and port in request URLs match the specified hostnames and the listening ports. If Agate is behind a proxy on another port and receives a request with an URL specifying the proxy port, this port may not match one of Agate's listening ports and the request will be rejected: it is possible to disable the port check with `--skip-port-check`.
Agate has support for using multiple certificates with the `--certs` option. Agate will thus always require that a client uses SNI, which should not be a problem since the Gemini specification also requires SNI to be used.
Certificates are by default stored in the `.certificates` directory. This is a hidden directory for the purpose that uncautious people may set the content root directory to the current directory which may also contain the certificates directory. In this case, the certificates and private keys would still be hidden. The certificates are only loaded when Agate is started and are not reloaded while running. The certificates directory may directly contain a key and certificate pair, this is the default pair used if no other matching keys are present. The certificates directory may also contain subdirectories for specific domains, for example a folder for `example.org` and `portal.example.org`. Note that the subfolders for subdomains (like `portal.example.org`) should not be inside other subfolders but directly in the certificates directory. Agate will select the certificate/key pair whose name matches most closely. For example take the following directory structure:
.certificates |-- cert.pem (1) |-- key.der (1) |-- example.org | |-- cert.pem (2) | `-- key.der (2) `-- portal.example.org |-- cert.pem (3) `-- key.der (3)
This would be understood like this:
Using a directory named just `.` causes undefined behaviour as this would have the same meaning as the top level certificate/key pair (pair (1) in the example above).
The files for a certificate/key pair have to be named `cert.der` and `key.der` respectively. The certificate has to be a X.509 certificate in a DER format file and has to include a subject alt name of the domain name. The private key has to be in DER format and must be either an RSA, ECDSA or Ed25519 key.
All requests via TCP sockets will be logged using this format:
<local ip>:<local port> <remote ip or dash> "<request>" <response status> "<response meta>"[ error:<error>]
All requests via Unix sockets will be logged using this format:
unix:[<unix socket name>] - "<request>" <response status> "<response meta>"[ error:<error>]
Square brackets indicate optional parts.
The "error:" part will only be logged if an error occurred. This should only be used for informative purposes as the status code should provide the information that an error occurred. If the error consisted in the connection not being established (e.g. because of TLS errors), special status codes listed below may be used.
By default, Agate will not log the remote IP addresses because that might be an issue because IPs are considered private data under the EU's GDPR. To enable logging of IP addresses, you can use the `--log-ip` option. Note that in this case some error conditions might still force Agate to log a dash instead of an IP address. IP addresses can also not be logged for connections via Unix sockets.
There are some lines apart from these that might occur in logs depending on the selected log level. For example the initial "Listening on..." line or information about listing a particular directory.
Agate uses some status codes that are not valid Gemini status codes when logging errors:
If you want to run agate on a multi-user system, you should be aware that all certificate and key data is loaded into memory and stored there until the server stops. Since the memory is also not explicitly overwritten or zeroed after use, the sensitive data might stay in memory after the server has terminated.
All notable changes to this project will be documented in this file.
The format is based on Keep a Changelog and this project adheres to Semantic Versioning.
Semantic versioning standard v2.0.0
Thank you to Jan Stępień and @michaelnordmeyer for contributing to this release.
Thank you to @equalsraf, @michaelnordmeyer and @wanderer1988 for contributing to this release.
Thank you to @06kellyjac, @albertlarsan68 and @kahays for contributing to this release.
Thank you to T. Spivey for contributing to this release.
Thank you to @Suzie97 for contributing to this release.
Thank you to @MatthiasPortzel for contributing to this release.
Thank you to @balazsbtond and @joseph-marques for contributing to this release.
Thank you to @FoxKyong for contributing to this release.
sometimes fail. starting the listeners on different socket addresses is now synchronous
(#79)
Thank you to @etam for contributing to this release.
linux distributions seem to do this), detect a second unspecified address to not cause
the "address in use" error with the default listening addresses
Thank you to @jgarte and @alvaro-cuesta for contributing to this release.
Agate would only bind to the first address that did not result in an error. (#63)
Thank you to Matthew Ingwersen and Oliver Simmons (@GoodClover) for contributing to this release.
Symlinks were already working before.
To retain the current behaviour of showing a `51 Not found, sorry.` error, add the following line to the respective directories' `.meta` file:
index.gmi: 51 Not found, sorry.
Thank you to @06kellyjac, @cpnfeeny, @lifelike, @skittlesvampir and @steko for contributing to this release.
The previous handling could be exploited as a DoS attack vector. (#59)
Thank you to @kvibber, @lifelike and @pasdechance for contributing to this release.
Thank you to @MidAutumnMoon and @steko for contributing to this release.
Thank you to @ddevault for contributing to this release.
Certificates are now stored in a special directory. To migrate to this version, the keys should be stored in the `.certificates` directory (or any other directory you specify).
This enables us to use multiple certificates for multiple domains.
Note that if you want to continue to use your old certificates (recommended because of TOFU), they probably lack the `subjectAltName` directive so your old certificates should be placed at the top level of the certificates directory. Otherwise you will get an error similar to this: "The certificate file for example.com is malformed: unexpected error: The server certificate is not valid for the given name"
If you want to continue using your existing certificates and keys, please convert them to DER format. You should be able to use these commands if you have openssl installed:
openssl x509 -in cert.pem -out cert.der -outform DER openssl rsa -in key.rsa -out key.der -outform DER
Since agate will automatically generate certificates from now on, the different format should not be a problem because users are not expected to handle certificates unless experienced enough to be able to handle DER formatting as well.
`<local ip>:<local port> <remote ip or dash> "<request>" <response status> "<response meta>" [error:<error>]`
If the connection could not be established correctly (e.g. because of TLS errors), the status code `00` is used.
Thank you to @littleli and @06kellyjac for contributing to this release.
Functionally equivalent to version 2.5.1, only releasing a new version to update README on crates.io.
Agate now has an explicit code of conduct and contributing guidelines.
Thank you to @ERnsTL, @gegeweb, @SuddenPineapple, and @Ylhp for contributing to this release.
This is the same as [2.4.0], only the build process has been changed so it should accommodate a wider range of architectures and devices.
Since there is a new maintainer (@Johann150), the range in pre-compiled binaries has changed a bit.
Thanks to @Johann150.
Thank you to @gegeweb, @Johann150 and @purexo for contributing to this release.
Thank you to @Johann150 and @KilianKemps for contributing to this release.
Thank you to @bortzmeyer, @KillianKemps, and @Ylhp for contributing to this release.
This release is functionally identical to Agate 1.3.1, and users of that version do not need to update.
Thanks @dcreager for contributing this fix.
Thank you @Johann150, @jonhiggs and @tronje for contributing to this release!
Thank you to @m040601 for contributing to this release.