mist

A (hopefully) nice, pure Gleam web server

Installation

This package can be added to your Gleam project:

gleam add mist

and its documentation can be found at https://hexdocs.pm/mist.

Usage

Right now there are a few options. Let’s say you want a “simple” HTTP server that you can customize to your heart’s content. In that case, you want:

pub fn main() {
  assert Ok(_) =
    mist.run_service(
      8080,
      fn(_req) {
        response.new(200)
        |> response.set_body(bit_builder.from_bit_string(<<
          "hello, world!":utf8,
        >>))
      },
    )
  erlang.sleep_forever()
}

Maybe you also want to work with websockets. Maybe those should only be upgradable at a certain endpoint. For that, you can use http_func. The websocket methods help you build a handler with connect/disconnect handlers. You can use these to, for example, track connected clients. For example:

pub fn main() {
  assert Ok(_) =
    serve(
      8080,
      http.handler_func(fn(req: Request(BitString)) {
        case request.path_segments(req) {
          ["echo", "test"] ->
            websocket.echo_handler
            |> websocket.with_handler
            |> websocket.on_init(on_init) // do something with the Sender
            |> websocket.on_close(on_close) // same
            |> Upgrade
          ["home"] ->
            response.new(200)
            |> response.set_body(BitBuilderBody(bit_builder.from_bit_string(<<
              "sup home boy":utf8,
            >>)))
            // NOTE: This is response from `mist/http`
            |> Response
          _ ->
            response.new(200)
            |> response.set_body(BitBuilderBody(bit_builder.from_bit_string(<<
              "Hello, world!":utf8,
            >>)))
            |> Response
        }
      }),
    )
  erlang.sleep_forever()
}

There is some initial support for sending files as well:

import mist/file
import mist/http.{BitBuilderBody, FileBody, Response} as mhttp
// ...

pub fn main() {
  assert Ok(_) =
    mist.serve(
      8080,
      mhttp.handler_func(fn(req: Request(BitString)) {
        case request.path_segments(req) {
          ["static", ..path] -> {
            // verify, validate, etc
            let file_path =
              path
              |> string.join("/")
              |> string.append("/", _)
              |> bit_string.from_string
            let size = file.size(file_path)
            assert Ok(fd) = file.open(file_path)
            response.new(200)
            |> response.set_body(FileBody(fd, int.to_string(size), 0, size))
            |> Response
          }
          _ ->
            response.new(404)
            |> response.set_body(BitBuilderBody(bit_builder.new()))
            |> Response
        }
      }),
    )
  erlang.sleep_forever()
}

If you need something a little more complex or custom, you can always use the helpers exported by the various glisten/mist modules.

Benchmarks

These are currently located here