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authorJoshua Branson <jbranso@dismail.de>2020-09-10 09:50:28 -0400
committerSamuel Thibault <samuel.thibault@ens-lyon.org>2020-09-13 16:58:24 +0200
commitd149a746478ae0178e16983ac61bb255dd3d7205 (patch)
treea2956e895cd86cb8022919882bd27ec14757e2f4
parent0dfc542ab788bddfb09f295c2c7033a3ec62e9bb (diff)
Better introduce httpfs and xmlfs
hurd/translator/httpfs.mdwn: I added a Intro, how to use, and TODO section. hurd/translator/xmlfs.mdwn: I added a How to use and TODO wishlist section. I copied most of the text from the Hurd extras repos. Message-Id: <20200910135028.27288-1-jbranso@dismail.de>
-rw-r--r--hurd/translator/httpfs.mdwn73
-rw-r--r--hurd/translator/xmlfs.mdwn74
2 files changed, 147 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/hurd/translator/httpfs.mdwn b/hurd/translator/httpfs.mdwn
index 8b02aa06..0fc6fbbd 100644
--- a/hurd/translator/httpfs.mdwn
+++ b/hurd/translator/httpfs.mdwn
@@ -12,6 +12,79 @@ License|/fdl]]."]]"""]]
While the httpfs translator works, it is only suitable for very simple use cases: it just provides the actual file contents downloaded from the URL, but no additional status information that are necessary for interactive use. (Progress indication, error codes, HTTP redirects etc.)
+# Intro
+INTRODUCTION:
+
+Here we describe the structure of the /http filesystem for the Hurd.
+Under the Hurd, we provide a translator called 'httpfs' which is intended
+to provide the filesystem structure.
+
+The httpfs translator accepts an "http:// URL" as an argument. The underlying
+node of the translator can be a file or directory. This is guided by the --mode
+command lineoption. Default is a directory.
+
+If its a file, only file system read requests are supported on that node. If
+its a directory, we can cd into that directory and ls would list the files in
+the web server. A web server may provide a directory listing or it may not
+provide, whatever it be the case the web server always returns an HTML stream
+for an user request (GET command). So to get the files residing in the web
+server, we have to parse the incoming HTML stream to find out the anchor
+tags. These anchor tags point to different pages or files in the web
+server. These file name are extracted and filled into the node of the
+translator. An anchor tag can also be a pointer to an external URL, in such a
+case we just show that URL as a regular file so that the user can make file
+system read requests on that URL. In case the file is a URL, we change the name
+of URL by converting all the /'s with .'s so that it can be displayed in the
+file system.
+
+Only the root node is filled when the translator is set, subdirectories inside
+that are filled as on demand, i.e. when a cd or ls occurs on that particular sub
+directory.
+
+The File size is now displayed as 0. One way of getting individual file sizes is
+sending a GET request for each file and cull the file size from Content-Length
+field of an HTTP response. But this may put a very heavy burden on the network,
+So as of now we have not incorporated this method with this http translator.
+
+The translator uses the libxml2 library for doing the parsing of HTML
+stream. The libxml2 provides SAX interfaces for the parser which are used for
+finding the begining of anchor tags <A href="i.html>. So the translator has
+dependency on the libxml2 library.
+
+If the connection to the Internet through a proxy, then the user must explicitly
+give the IP address and port of the proxy server by using the command line
+options --proxy and --port.
+
+
+# How to Use httpfs
+
+ # settrans -a tmp/ /hurd/httpfs http://www.gnu.org/software/hurd/index.html
+
+<Remember to give the / at the end of the URL, unless you are specifying a specific file like www.hurd-project.com/httpfs.html >
+
+ # cd tmp/
+
+ # ls -l
+
+ # settrans -a tmp/ /hurd/httpfs http://www.gnu.org/software/hurd/index.html --proxy=192.168.1.103
+ --port=3126
+
+The above command should be used in case if the access to the Internet is
+through a proxy server, substitute your proxies IP and port no.s
+
+# TODO
+
+- https:// support
+- scheme-relative URL support (eg. "//example.com/")
+- query-string and fragment support
+- HTTP/1.1 support
+- HTTP/2 support
+- HTTP/3 support
+- Teach httpfs to understand HTTP status codes like re-directs, 404 not found,
+ etc.
+- Teach httpfs to look for "sitemaps". Many sites offer a sitemap, and this
+ would be a nifty way for httpfs to allow grep-ing the entire site's contents.
+
# Source
<http://www.nongnu.org/hurdextras/#httpfs>
diff --git a/hurd/translator/xmlfs.mdwn b/hurd/translator/xmlfs.mdwn
index a4de1668..bde5960b 100644
--- a/hurd/translator/xmlfs.mdwn
+++ b/hurd/translator/xmlfs.mdwn
@@ -11,6 +11,80 @@ License|/fdl]]."]]"""]]
`xmlfs` is a translator that provides access to XML documents through the
filesystem.
+# How to Use xmlfs
+
+ xmlfs - a translator for accessing XML documents
+
+This is only an alpha version. It works in read only. It supports
+text nodes and attributes. It doesn't do anything fancy like size
+computing, though. Here is an example of how to use it:
+
+ $ wget http://cvs.savannah.nongnu.org/viewvc/*checkout*/hurdextras/xmlfs/example.xml?content-type=text%2Fplain;
+ $ settrans -ca xml /hurd/xmlfs example.xml #the website says to use ./xmlfs
+ $ cd xml; ls
+ library0 library1
+ $ cd library0; ls -A
+ .text1 .text2 @name book0 book1 book2 sub-library0 sub-library1
+ $ cat .text2
+
+CDATA, again !
+
+ $ cat book0
+ <book>
+ <author>Mark Twain</author>
+ <title>La case de l'oncle Tom</title>
+ <isbn>4242</isbn>
+ </book>
+ $ cat book0/author/.text
+ Mark Twain
+
+As you can see, text nodes are named .textN, with N an integer
+starting from 0. Sorting is supposed to be stable, so you get the same
+N every time you access the same file. If there is only one text node
+at this level, N is ommitted. Attributes are prefixed with @.
+
+An example file, example.xml, is provided. Of course, it does not
+contain anything useful. xmlfs has been tested on several-megabytes
+XML documents, though.
+
+Comments are welcome.
+
+ -- Manuel Menal <mmenal@hurdfr.org>
+
+# TODO
+- Handle memory usage in a clever way:
+ - do not dump the nodes at each read, try to guess if read()
+ is called in a sequence of read() operations (e.g. cat reads
+ 8192 bytes by 8192 bytes) and if it is, cache the node
+ contents. That'd need a very small ftpfs-like GC.
+ - perhaps we shouldn't store the node informations from
+ first access to end and have a pool of them. That might come
+ with next entries though.
+ - Handle changes of the backing store (XML document) while running.
+ (Idea: we should probably attach to the XML node and handle
+ read()/write() operations ourselves, with libxml primitives.)
+ - Write support. Making things like echo >, sed and so on work is
+ quite obvious. Editing is not -that- simple, 'cause we could
+ want to save a not XML well-formed, and libxml will just return
+ an error. Perhaps we should use something like 'sync'.
+ - Handle error cases in a more clever way ; there are many error
+ conditions that will just cause xmlfs to crash or do strange
+ things. We should review them.
+ - Make sorting *really* stable.
+
+# TODO WISHLIST
+--------
+
+ - Kilobug suggested a --xslt option that would make xmlfs provide
+ a tree matching the XSLT-modified document.
+ (Problem: In this case we cannot attach easily to the .xml 'cause
+ the user would loose access to theirs original document. Perhaps
+ we should allow an optional "file.xml" argument and check if it
+ is not the same as the file we are attaching to when --xslt is
+ specified.)
+ - DTD support ; perhaps XML schema/RelaxNG when I'm sure I understand
+ them ;-)
+
# Source