diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'Run/Que')
-rw-r--r-- | Run/Que/Server.hs | 19 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | Run/Que/index.md | 2 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | Run/Que/quescripts.md | 6 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | Run/Que/tutorial.md | 26 |
4 files changed, 32 insertions, 21 deletions
diff --git a/Run/Que/Server.hs b/Run/Que/Server.hs index 218c821..38c6bdc 100644 --- a/Run/Que/Server.hs +++ b/Run/Que/Server.hs @@ -92,6 +92,7 @@ routes = do app . modify <| upsertNamespace ns q <- app <| que ns qp poll <- Scotty.param "poll" !: (pure . const False) + guardNs ns ["pub", "_"] case poll of True -> Scotty.stream $ streamQue q _ -> do @@ -106,19 +107,31 @@ routes = do xRealIP <- Scotty.header "X-Real-IP" host <- Scotty.header "Host" (ns, qp) <- extract - -- Only allow my IP or localhost to access '_' namespace + -- Only allow my IP or localhost to publish to '_' namespace when ("_" == ns) <| case (xFwdHost, xRealIP, host) of (Just "73.222.221.62", _, _) -> Scotty.status Http.ok200 (_, Just "73.222.221.62", _) -> Scotty.status Http.ok200 - (Just "::1", Just "::1", Just "localhost") -> Scotty.status Http.ok200 + (_, _, Just ("localhost:3000")) -> Scotty.status Http.ok200 _ -> Scotty.status Http.methodNotAllowed405 - >> Scotty.text "error 405 not allowed: _ is a reserved namespace" + >> Scotty.text "not allowed: _ is a reserved namespace" + guardNs ns ["pub"] + -- passed all auth checks app . modify <| upsertNamespace ns q <- app <| que ns qp qdata <- Scotty.body liftIO <| pushQue (BSL.toStrict qdata) q return () +-- | Given `guardNs ns whitelist`, if `ns` is not in the `whitelist` +-- list, return a 405 error. +guardNs :: Text -> [Text] -> Scotty.ActionT Text App () +guardNs ns whitelist = when (not <| ns `elem` whitelist) <| do + Scotty.status Http.methodNotAllowed405 + Scotty.text + <| "not allowed: use 'pub' namespace or signup to protect '" + <> ns + <> "' at https://que.run" + -- | recover from a scotty-thrown exception. (!:) :: Scotty.ActionT Text App a -- ^ action that might throw diff --git a/Run/Que/index.md b/Run/Que/index.md index beca49d..c0f5105 100644 --- a/Run/Que/index.md +++ b/Run/Que/index.md @@ -10,7 +10,7 @@ que.run is the concurrent, async runtime in the cloud - async programming as easy as running two terminal commands HTTP routes on `que.run` are Golang-like channels with a namespace and a -path. For example: `https://que.run/example/path/subpath`. +path. For example: `https://que.run/pub/path/subpath`. ## Quickstart diff --git a/Run/Que/quescripts.md b/Run/Que/quescripts.md index 0414d90..9a2e6e0 100644 --- a/Run/Que/quescripts.md +++ b/Run/Que/quescripts.md @@ -10,15 +10,15 @@ the job finishes. In one terminal run the listener: - que example/notify --then "notify-send '\que' '\msg'" + que pub/notify --then "notify-send '\que' '\msg'" In some other terminal run the job that takes forever: - runtests ; echo "tests are done" | que example/notify - + runtests ; echo "tests are done" | que pub/notify - When terminal 2 succeeds, terminal 1 will print "tests are done", then call the `notify-send` command, which displays a notification toast in -Linux with title "`example/notify`" and content "`tests are done`". +Linux with title "`pub/notify`" and content "`tests are done`". Que paths are multi-producer and multi-consumer, so you can add as many terminals as you want. diff --git a/Run/Que/tutorial.md b/Run/Que/tutorial.md index b5b258d..66ecd3c 100644 --- a/Run/Que/tutorial.md +++ b/Run/Que/tutorial.md @@ -8,24 +8,24 @@ are pretty much the same thing. Put some values in one end, and take them out the other end at a different time, or in a different process. Ques are created dynamically for every HTTP request you make. Here we -use the `que` client to create a new que at the path `example/new-que`: +use the `que` client to create a new que at the path `pub/new-que`: - que example/new-que + que pub/new-que The `que` client is useful, but you can use anything to make the HTTP request, for example here's the same thing with curl: - curl https://que.run/example/new-que + curl https://que.run/pub/new-que These requests will block until a value is placed on the other end. Let's do that now. In a separate terminal: - echo "hello world" | que example/new-que - + echo "hello world" | que pub/new-que - This tells the `que` client to read the value from `stdin` and then send it to `example/new-que`. Or with curl: - curl https://que.run/example/new-que -d "hello world" + curl https://que.run/pub/new-que -d "hello world" This will succeed immediately and send the string "`hello world`" over the channel, which will be received and printed by the listener in the @@ -37,19 +37,17 @@ you want. ## Namespaces Ques are organized into namespaces, identified by the first fragment of -the path. In the above commands we used `example` as the namespace, but -you can use whatever you want. +the path. In the above commands we used `pub` as the namespace, which is +a special publically-writable namespace. The other special namespace is +`_` which is reserved for internal use only. You can't write to the `_` +namespace. -Except, there is one special namespace `_` which is reserved for -internal use only. You can't write to the `_` namespace. - -Namespaces are normally public, and anyone can write and read to -them. The `Pro` version allows you to reserve namespaces and add -authentication. +To use other namespaces and add authentication/access controls, you can +[sign up for the Power package](/_/index). ## Events Just reading and writing data isn't very exciting, so let's throw in some events. We can very quickly put together a job processor. - que example/new-que --then "./worker.sh '\msg'" + que pub/new-que --then "./worker.sh '\msg'" |