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2023-04-09
Gemini is a protocol similar to HTTP, in that it’s used for transmitting (mostly) text in (usually) a markup language. However, one of the primary goals of Gemini is simplicity. Requests are always a single TLS/TCP connection with the route, and a correct response looks like `20 text/gemini\n\rhello world\n`. Additionally, Gemini uses a language called “Gemtext” as its markup language. It’s kind of like Markdown, but even simpler. Every line can only contain a single type of data, so for example you can’t have links in the middle of text. Read the Gemini spec if you’re interested.
Anyways, so I decided to make my website support the Gemini protocol for fun. The plan is to make it translate the HTML on my blog into Gemtext, which shouldn’t be *too* hard considering that HTML is generated from mostly markdown.
Here’s an example of a typical blog post I write, mostly markdown and some HTML.
At first, I tried using the html_parser Rust crate to read the HTML and flatten it out. However, I soon ran into issue #22: Incorrectly trimming whitespaces for text nodes. This made text be squished with links, and while technically I could’ve added workarounds by having it add spaces there I figured it’d be better to avoid issues with that in the future by just using a different crate. I looked at other HTML parsing crates and decided on tl, which does not suffer from the same issue as html_parser.
issue #22: Incorrectly trimming whitespaces for text nodes
If you remember from earlier, though, Gemini does not support inline links! I considered other options like putting every link at the end of the post, but I decided to make it dump the links at the end of every paragraph so they’re easy to find while you’re reading.
To make images work, I had to make my crawler download them into a directory so the Gemini server could serve them easily. The actual Gemtext for them is straightforward though.
To actually serve the Gemini site (capsule, technically), I initially thought I was going to use Agate, but I decided it would be more fun to make my own server (and it’d make it easier to integrate with the crawler). The only thing I was kind of worried about implementing was TLS. I started by copy-pasting from the Rustls examples on their docs, but I wasn’t sure how to make the self-signing work. I took a look at how Agate was doing it, and they’re also using Rustls but through tokio_rustls, and using a crate called rcgen for generating the certificates.
My code for that ended up looking kinda like this:
use rcgen::{Certificate, CertificateParams, DnType}; use tokio_rustls::rustls; let mut cert_params = CertificateParams::new(vec![HOSTNAME.to_string()]); cert_params .distinguished_name .push(DnType::CommonName, HOSTNAME); let cert = Certificate::from_params(cert_params).unwrap(); let public_key = new_cert.serialize_der().unwrap(); let private_key = new_cert.serialize_private_key_der(); let cert = rustls::Certificate(public_key); let private_key = rustls::PrivateKey(private_key);use rcgen::{Certificate, CertificateParams, DnType}; use tokio_rustls::rustls; let mut cert_params = CertificateParams::new(vec![HOSTNAME.to_string()]); cert_params .distinguished_name .push(DnType::CommonName, HOSTNAME); let cert = Certificate::from_params(cert_params).unwrap(); let public_key = new_cert.serialize_der().unwrap(); let private_key = new_cert.serialize_private_key_der(); let cert = rustls::Certificate(public_key); let private_key = rustls::PrivateKey(private_key);
After I set it up to wrap the TCP connection with TLS, it worked! At least, it worked on Lagrange, my client of choice. I thought this would be the end of getting my server implementation to work, so I deployed it to a VPS, opened the port on IPv4 and IPv6, and added the A and AAAA records to Cloudflare.
(spoiler: it was not the end of getting my server implementation to work)
I realized it may be a good idea to test on more clients, just to make sure it all works properly. The second client I tried was Castor. When I tried loading my capsule on Castor, it didn’t load. I went looking for solutions, and stumbled upon a ”Gemini server torture test”, which basically does a bunch of crazy requests to servers and makes sure it responds to all of them correctly. When I first ran it, my server was failing most tests. I looked at the failing tests that looked most suspicious, and decided to implement TLS `close_notify` first, since not implementing it was a violation of the spec I’d initially overlooked. Fortunately implementing it was very easy, just a single line change. This fixed the capsule on Castor.
I then tried another client, for mobile this time, called Buran. It did not load my capsule :sob:. I tried more clients, and the majority seemed to be failing as well. I implemented more fixes, some of which were in the torture test, and some which weren’t. This made the websites accessible when I was hosting locally, but not when it was deployed to my server.
I wasn’t sure how this was possible, and I considered the possibility of perhaps my server not supporting TLS 1.2 properly (I knew it supported 1.3 since the torture test tests for that). I found a random Gemini client Python library that failed to send requests to my server and modified it to always use TLS 1.3, but this did not resolve it either.
I added more logging to my server, and noticed that the clients weren’t even opening a TCP connection. Maybe it’s a DNS issue? DNS seemed to be working fine, but I noticed running `print(socket.getaddrinfo('matdoes.dev', 1965))` from Python always puts the IPv6 first. Maybe it’s an issue with IPv6 then? The torture test has a check for IPv6 though…
I removed the AAAA DNS record and waited a few minutes, and this actually worked!? I didn’t want to keep my site IPv4-only though, so I kept trying to track down the source of the issue. Maybe I had to put the IPv6 in expanded form when I pasted it into the DNS records?? (this did not work, of course).
After a bit of searching, I found a discussion on Tokio’s Axum web framework that seemed relevant.
> The following results in an Axum which is available on port 3000 via IPv4 only. How can I make it available on IPv6, also?
let addr = SocketAddr::from(([0, 0, 0, 0], 3000));The following results in an Axum which is available on port 3000 via IPv4 only. How can I make it available on IPv6, also?
let addr = SocketAddr::from(([0, 0, 0, 0], 3000));let addr = SocketAddr::from(([0, 0, 0, 0], 3000));
> Try with:
let addr = ":::3000".parse().unwrap();Try with:
let addr = ":::3000".parse().unwrap();let addr = ":::3000".parse().unwrap();
Was this actually the solution? I was under the impression 0.0.0.0 would work for both IPv4 and IPv6. I replaced `0.0.0.0` with `::` in my code, and this actually made it work everywhere! :tada: (I later replaced it with `[::]`, just in case, though I don’t think it was actually necessary).
This is completely unrelated to Gemini, but I wanted to mention it anyways. Originally, my website was hosted on Cloudflare Pages, since it’s just a static site. However if I wanted to make other ports accessible, I’d have to make it not be proxied by Cloudflare. I decided to just move it to the server I was already hosting my Matrix and Mastodon (technically Pleroma) instances on so I wouldn’t have to buy a new server.
I copied a script I wrote a while ago that automatically watches for changes on GitHub and runs a shell command when there’s a commit. I know it’s kind of cursed and I should be using a webhook or whatever but this works good enough. So anyways I made it put the build output in `/home/ubuntu/matdoesdev/build` and told Caddy to have a file-server route on `matdoes.dev` with that directory as the root.
I tried to reload Caddy, but it was taking an unusually long amount of time and eventually timed out. I enabled debug logs but didn’t see anything too suspicious. I then tried to completely restart Caddy, but this made the Matrix and Pleroma instance on the server inaccessible … After waiting about ten minutes, the issue resolved itself and the other routes were accessible again.
The other routes. i.e., not the route I was trying to add. This time, though, I was actually getting an error. When I tried to access the domain, I saw an error in the log that said something about not having enough permissions to read the directory. I modified the permissions on the directory and all the files in it to be readable, writable, and executable by every user, but this somehow did not resolve the issue.
I found a post on the Caddy forums that appeared to be about someone having the same issue as me.
The first answer:
> the caddy user still has to have execution access for every parent folder in the path to traverse/reach the file.the caddy user still has to have execution access for every parent folder in the path to traverse/reach the file.
Why??? I don’t want to give the Caddy user permission to access every parent folder. I ended up just making a `/www` directory and having it copy the build output to there, and I did not come across any more significant issues.
Maybe I’ll support for more protocols to my website in the future? I saw lots of talk about Gopher while I was looking around the Geminispace, and maybe it’d be cool to also make the website be accessible from Telnet or SSH or something.
Here’s the code for my crawler/translator/Gemini server, it’s not particularly great but it works.