woo
2024-10-12
An asynchronous HTTP server written in Common Lisp
Woo
Woo is a fast non-blocking HTTP server built on top of libev. Although Woo is written in Common Lisp, it aims to be the fastest web server written in any programming language.
Warning
This software is still BETA quality.
How fast?
See benchmark.md for the detail.
Usage
Use clack:clackup
or woo:run
to start a web server. The first argument is a Lack "app". See Lack's README for instruction on how to build it.
Remember to pass ":debug nil" to turn off the debugger mode on production environments (it's on by default). Otherwise, your server will go down on internal errors.
Start a server
(ql:quickload :woo) (woo:run (lambda (env) (declare (ignore env)) '(200 (:content-type "text/plain") ("Hello, World"))))
Start with Clack
(ql:quickload :clack) (clack:clackup (lambda (env) (declare (ignore env)) '(200 (:content-type "text/plain") ("Hello, World"))) :server :woo :use-default-middlewares nil)
Cluster
(woo:run (lambda (env) (declare (ignore env)) '(200 (:content-type "text/plain") ("Hello, World"))) :worker-num 4)
SSL Support
Use SSL key arguments of woo:run
or clack:clackup
.
(woo:run app :ssl-cert-file #P"path/to/cert.pem" :ssl-key-file #P"path/to/key.pem" :ssl-key-password "password") (clack:clackup app :ssl-cert-file #P"path/to/cert.pem" :ssl-key-file #P"path/to/key.pem" :ssl-key-password "password")
To disable the HTTPS support to omit a dependency on CL+SSL, add woo-no-ssl
to cl:*features*
.
Signal handling
When the master process gets these signals, it kills worker processes and quits afterwards.
- QUIT: graceful shutdown, waits for all requests are finished.
- INT/TERM: shutdown immediately.
Benchmarks
See benchmark.md.
Installation
Requirements
- UNIX (GNU Linux, Mac, *BSD)
- SBCL
- libev
- OpenSSL or LibreSSL (Optional)
- To turn off SSL, add
:woo-no-ssl
tocl:*features*
before loading Woo.
- To turn off SSL, add
Installing via Quicklisp
(ql:quickload :woo)
Docker example
- Dockerfile for Quickdocs's API server.
See Also
Author
- Eitaro Fukamachi ([email protected])
Copyright
Copyright (c) 2014 Eitaro Fukamachi & contributors
License
Licensed under the MIT License.