Dominic Tarr committed 0.2.1Latest: ab2db58 on 9/26/2017, 8:03:51 PM | |
📄 | .travis.yml |
📄 | LICENSE |
📄 | README.md |
📄 | index.js |
📄 | package.json |
multiblob-http
serve content-addressed blobs over http. see use with multiblob
example
var MultiBlob = require('multiblob')
var MultiBlobHttp = require('multiblob-http')
var http = require('http')
var dir = where_files_go //set this.
var blobs = MultiBlob(dir)
http.createServer(MultiBlobHttp(blobs, '/blobs')).listen(8000)
this will return an http handler (compatible with express middleware) that will handle requests
GET /blobs/get/{id}
POST /blobs/add
(which will respond with the hash)
you can also set a different prefix, but I use /blobs
http api
GET /get/{id}
retrive blob with hash {id}
POST /add
posts to add do not require to have a hash, but will respond with the hash. (TODO: take a POST to /add/{id} and error if received content did not have that hash)
caching && headers
multiblobs-http
provides the correct headers to make serving content-addressed
files as efficient as possible.
First the the etag
header is set to the hash and the expires header is set to a year in the future.
Ideally, the browser shouldn't request this resource again for a whole year.
Probably it might revalidate it when someone uses ctrl-R
to reload the page.
When it does, it will request with if-none-modified
set to the hash.
Since content-addressed files are never modified, the server immediately responds
with 304 (not modified)
the content-length
header is always used. This way, if a connection fails somehow,
or there is an error later, the browser should detect it.
Of course, it would be way better if browsers just understood content-hashes.
But, we have to play the hand we where delt, and
multiblob-http
makes the most of the broken web we live in.
License
MIT
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