could someone give me a hint, howto serve the current directory from command line with ruby? it would be great, if i can have some system wide configuration (e.g. mime-types) and simply launch it from every directory.
Simplest way possible (thanks Aaron Patterson/n0kada):
ruby -run -e httpd . -p 9090
Alternate, more complex way:
ruby -r webrick -e "s = WEBrick::HTTPServer.new(:Port => 9090, :DocumentRoot => Dir.pwd); trap('INT') { s.shutdown }; s.start"
Even the first command is hard to remember, so I just have this in my .bashrc
:
function serve {
port="${1:-3000}"
ruby -run -e httpd . -p $port
}
It serves the current directory on port 3000 by default, but you can also specify the port:
~ $ cd tmp
~/tmp $ serve # ~/tmp served on port 3000
~/tmp $ cd ../www
~/www $ serve 5000 # ~/www served on port 5000
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If you're on windows, is it possible to add this to cmd or powershell as a function? – Caleb Apr 25 '13 at 20:15
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@Daniel - when I run your one liner on my Mac. I got this error message: uninitialized constant INT (NameError). Are you running it on a different platform? Do you know how I can avoid this? But if I write it into a file say myserver.rb then do "ruby myserver.rb", it works fine. – Tony Jiang Aug 23 '13 at 0:23
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@TonyJiang I'm also running on a Mac. Tried it with Ruby 1.8.7, 1.9.3 and 2.0.0, and they all work. Weird. – Daniel Perez Alvarez Sep 9 '13 at 9:04
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7To demistify
ruby -run -e httpd . -p 9090
look at ruby-doc.org/stdlib-2.0.0/libdoc/un/rdoc/index.html. It's executing httpd method fromun
ruby standard library, thus require un. – Gee-Bee Sep 3 '14 at 9:45 -
1@Deviljho if you are running on Mac or Linux, just add an ampersand at the end of the command to send it to the background:
ruby -run -e httpd . -p 9090 &
If you want to bring it back to the foreground, usefg
. – Daniel Perez Alvarez Nov 2 '15 at 9:42
I've never seen anything as compact as
python3 -m http.server
You can optionally add a port number to the end:
python3 -m http.server 9000
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There is a list of pretty compact solutions here: gist.github.com/willurd/5720255 :) – Felix Aug 3 '17 at 6:20
As Aaron Patterson tweeted it out today you can do:
ruby -run -e httpd . -p 5000
And you can set the bind address as well by adding -b 127.0.0.1
Works with Ruby 1.9.2 and greater.
require 'webrick'
include WEBrick
s = HTTPServer.new(:Port => 9090, :DocumentRoot => Dir::pwd)
trap("INT"){ s.shutdown }
s.start
Use ruby gem Serve.
To install on your system, run gem install serve
.
To serve a directory, simply cd to the directory and run serve
.
Default port is 4000. It can also serve things like ERB, HAML, Slim and SASS.
Web Server in 1 line
This may or may not be quite what you want but it's so cool that I just had to share it.
I've used this in the past to serve the file system. Perhaps you could modify it or just accept that it serves everything.
ruby -rsocket -e 's=TCPServer.new(5**5);loop{_=s.accept;_<<"HTTP/1.0 200 OK\r\n\r\n#{File.read(_.gets.split[1])rescue nil}";_.close}'
I found it here
Chris
You can use the sinatra
gem, though it doesn't do any directory listing for you, it serves files:
require 'sinatra' # gem
set :public_folder, '.'
then run that as a file, if in 1.8 add require 'rubygems' to the top first.
After running it then url's like
http://localhost:4567/file_name
should resolve to "./file_name" file.
http://localhost:4567 won't work however, since it doesn't "do" directory listings. See https://stackoverflow.com/a/12115019/32453 for a workaround there.
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install the sinatra gem $ gem install sinatra then save this text to somefile.rb then run it – rogerdpack Dec 19 '12 at 23:24
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No, I mean, Sinatra gives me the error: Sinatra doesn’t know this ditty. – eveevans Dec 19 '12 at 23:28
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@eveevans somehow just noticed your comment [LOL sorry], updated now. – rogerdpack Sep 1 '16 at 15:44
python3 -m http.server
or if you don't want to use the default port 8000
python3 -m http.server 3333
or if you want to allow connections from localhost only
python3 -m http.server --bind 127.0.0.1
See the docs.