# Ecstatic [![build status](https://secure.travis-ci.org/jfhbrook/node-ecstatic.png)](http://travis-ci.org/jfhbrook/node-ecstatic) [![codecov.io](https://codecov.io/github/jfhbrook/node-ecstatic/coverage.svg?branch=master)](https://codecov.io/github/jfhbrook/node-ecstatic?branch=master) ![](http://imgur.com/vhub5.png) A simple static file server middleware. Use it with a raw http server, express/connect or on the CLI! # Examples: ## express 4.x ``` js 'use strict'; const express = require('express'); const ecstatic = require('../lib/ecstatic'); const http = require('http'); const app = express(); app.use(ecstatic({ root: `${__dirname}/public`, showdir: true, })); http.createServer(app).listen(8080); console.log('Listening on :8080'); ``` ## stock http server ``` js 'use strict'; const http = require('http'); const ecstatic = require('../lib/ecstatic')({ root: `${__dirname}/public`, showDir: true, autoIndex: true, }); http.createServer(ecstatic).listen(8080); console.log('Listening on :8080'); ``` ### fall through To allow fall through to your custom routes: ```js ecstatic({ root: __dirname + '/public', handleError: false }) ``` ## CLI ```sh ecstatic ./public --port 8080 ``` # Install: For using ecstatic as a library, just npm install it into your project: ```sh npm install --save ecstatic ``` For using ecstatic as a cli tool, either npm install it globally: ```sh npm install ecstatic -g ``` or install it locally and use npm runscripts to add it to your $PATH, or reference it directly with `./node_modules/.bin/ecstatic`. # API: ## ecstatic(opts); ## $ ecstatic [dir?] {options} --port PORT In node, pass ecstatic an options hash, and it will return your middleware! ```js const opts = { root: path.join(__dirname, 'public'), baseDir: '/', autoIndex: true, showDir: true, showDotfiles: true, humanReadable: true, hidePermissions: false, si: false, cache: 'max-age=3600', cors: false, gzip: true, brotli: false, defaultExt: 'html', handleError: true, serverHeader: true, contentType: 'application/octet-stream', weakEtags: true, weakCompare: true, handleOptionsMethod: false, } ``` If `opts` is a string, the string is assigned to the root folder and all other options are set to their defaults. When running in CLI mode, all options work as above, passed in [optimist](https://github.com/substack/node-optimist) style. `port` defaults to `8000`. If a `dir` or `--root dir` argument is not passed, ecsatic will serve the current dir. Ecstatic also respects the PORT environment variable. ### `opts.root` ### `--root {root}` `opts.root` is the directory you want to serve up. ### `opts.port` ### `--port {port}` In CLI mode, `opts.port` is the port you want ecstatic to listen to. Defaults to 8000. This can be overridden with the `--port` flag or with the PORT environment variable. ### `opts.baseDir` ### `--baseDir {dir}` `opts.baseDir` is `/` by default, but can be changed to allow your static files to be served off a specific route. For example, if `opts.baseDir === "blog"` and `opts.root = "./public"`, requests for `localhost:8080/blog/index.html` will resolve to `./public/index.html`. ### `opts.cache` ### `--cache {value}` Customize cache control with `opts.cache` , if it is a number then it will set max-age in seconds. Other wise it will pass through directly to cache-control. Time defaults to 3600 s (ie, 1 hour). If it is a function, it will be executed on every request, and passed the pathname. Whatever it returns, string or number, will be used as the cache control header like above. ### `opts.showDir` ### `--no-showDir` Turn **off** directory listings with `opts.showDir === false`. Defaults to **true**. ### `opts.showDotfiles` ### `--no-showDotfiles` Exclude dotfiles from directory listings with `opts.showDotfiles === false`. Defaults to **true**. ### `opts.humanReadable` ### `--no-human-readable` If showDir is enabled, add human-readable file sizes. Defaults to **true**. Aliases are `humanreadable` and `human-readable`. ### `opts.hidePermissions` ### `--hide-permissions` If hidePermissions is enabled, file permissions will not be displayed. Defaults to **false**. Aliases are `hidepermissions` and `hide-permissions`. ### `opts.headers` ### `--H {HeaderA: valA} [--H {HeaderB: valB}]` Set headers on every response. `opts.headers` can be an object mapping string header names to string header values, a colon (:) separated string, or an array of colon separated strings. `opts.H` and `opts.header` are aliased to `opts.headers` so that you can use `-H` and `--header` options to set headers on the command-line like curl: ``` sh $ ecstatic ./public -p 5000 -H 'Access-Control-Allow-Origin: *' ``` ### `opts.si` ### `--si` If showDir and humanReadable are enabled, print file sizes with base 1000 instead of base 1024. Name is inferred from cli options for `ls`. Aliased to `index`, the equivalent option in Apache. ### `opts.autoIndex` ### `--no-autoindex` Serve `/path/index.html` when `/path/` is requested. Turn **off** autoIndexing with `opts.autoIndex === false`. Defaults to **true**. ### `opts.defaultExt` ### `--defaultExt {ext}` Turn on default file extensions with `opts.defaultExt`. If `opts.defaultExt` is true, it will default to `html`. For example if you want a request to `/a-file` to resolve to `./public/a-file.html`, set this to `true`. If you want `/a-file` to resolve to `./public/a-file.json` instead, set `opts.defaultExt` to `json`. ### `opts.gzip` ### `--no-gzip` By default, ecstatic will serve `./public/some-file.js.gz` in place of `./public/some-file.js` when the gzipped version exists and ecstatic determines that the behavior is appropriate. If `./public/some-file.js.gz` is not valid gzip, this will fall back to `./public/some-file.js`. You can turn this off with `opts.gzip === false`. ### `opts.brotli` ### `--brotli` Serve `./public/some-file.js.br` in place of `./public/some-file.js` when the [brotli encoded](https://github.com/google/brotli) version exists and ecstatic determines that the behavior is appropriate. If the request does not contain `br` in the HTTP `accept-encoding` header, ecstatic will instead attempt to serve a gzipped version (if `opts.gzip` is `true`), or fall back to `./public.some-file.js`. Defaults to **false**. ### `opts.serverHeader` ### `--no-server-header` Set `opts.serverHeader` to false in order to turn off setting the `Server` header on all responses served by ecstatic. ### `opts.contentType` ### `--content-type {type}` Set `opts.contentType` in order to change default Content-Type header value. Defaults to **application/octet-stream**. ### `opts.mimeTypes` ### `--mime-types {filename}` Add new or override one or more mime-types. This affects the HTTP Content-Type header. Can either be a path to a [`.types`](http://svn.apache.org/repos/asf/httpd/httpd/trunk/docs/conf/mime.types) file or an object hash of type(s). ecstatic({ mimeTypes: { 'mime-type': ['file_extension', 'file_extension'] } }) ### `opts.handleError` Turn **off** handleErrors to allow fall-through with `opts.handleError === false`, Defaults to **true**. ### `opts.weakEtags` ### `--no-weak-etags` Set `opts.weakEtags` to false in order to generate strong etags instead of weak etags. Defaults to **true**. See `opts.weakCompare` as well. ### `opts.weakCompare` ### `--no-weak-compare` Turn off weakCompare to disable the weak comparison function for etag validation. Defaults to **true**. See https://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc2616.txt Section 13.3.3 for more details. ### `opts.handleOptionsMethod` ### `--handle-options-method` Set handleOptionsMethod to true in order to respond to 'OPTIONS' calls with any standard/set headers. Defaults to **false**. Useful for hacking up CORS support. ### `opts.cors` ### `--cors` This is a **convenience** setting which turns on `handleOptionsMethod` and sets the headers **Access-Control-Allow-Origin: \*** and **Access-Control-Allow-Headers: Authorization, Content-Type, If-Match, If-Modified-Since, If-None-Match, If-Unmodified-Since**. This *should* be enough to quickly make cross-origin resource sharing work between development APIs. More advanced usage can come either from overriding these headers with the headers argument, or by using the `handleOptionsMethod` flag and then setting headers "manually." Alternately, just do it in your app using separate middlewares/abstractions. Defaults to **false**. ## middleware(req, res, next); This works more or less as you'd expect. ### ecstatic.showDir(folder); This returns another middleware which will attempt to show a directory view. Turning on auto-indexing is roughly equivalent to adding this middleware after an ecstatic middleware with autoindexing disabled. # Tests: Ecstatic has a fairly extensive test suite. You can run it with: ```sh $ npm test ``` # Contribute: Without outside contributions, ecstatic would wither and die! Before contributing, take a quick look at the contributing guidelines in [./CONTRIBUTING.md](./CONTRIBUTING.md) . They're relatively painless, I promise. # License: MIT. See LICENSE.txt. For contributors, see CONTRIBUTORS.md