78 lignes
2.8 KiB
Markdown
78 lignes
2.8 KiB
Markdown
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# qswiki
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About
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====
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qswiki is a wiki software, intended for small wikis. Originally
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implemented in C, it's now written in C++.
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History
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====
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A couple of years ago, I wanted to setup a personal wiki on my raspberry
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pi. However, the distribution I used back then did not have a PHP package
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for ARM. So I decided I would write one in C. Yes, that's an odd way
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to approach the problem and indeed, I may have had too much time back
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then. Also, I wanted to see how it's like to write a "web app" in C
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and wanted to sharpen my C a little bit.
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Of course, it's pretty straightforward at first. No really. Just use CGI.
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And indeed, that's probably more than enough. Then I decided to play
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around and started using FastCGI (with the official library from now
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defunct fastcgi.com) and created a multi-threaded version. It initially
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used a "pile of files database", but that became too painful, so then
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I started using sqlite.
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C++
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---
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Eventually the code became unmaintainable. Initially, I wanted something
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quick. I did not care about memory leaks (as it was CGI initially).
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After FastCGI, they became an issue. In the end, the task of avoiding
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memory leaks became too annoying. And of course, C does not include any
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"batteries" and while I could manage, this too was another good reason.
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Overall, I am just continuing the experiment with C++17 now. It's not
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nearly as bad as you would expect perhaps. Some things are surprisingly
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convenient even. Still, the standard library is lacking and
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I would hope for a some better built-in Unicode support in the future.
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Features
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========
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To be fair, at this point it doesn't even have a "diff" between revisions
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yet and does not have features that make you prefer it over other wikis.
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- CGI
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- HTTP server using the header only library cpp-httplib. It's more
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portable and more "future-proof" than FastCGI (since the official website
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disappeared, the library's future appears to be uncertain).
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- Support for user accounts. Passwords are stored using PBKDF2.
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sqlite database, but not too much of an effort to add other types of
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storage backends. sqlite is using the great header only library
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sqlite_modern_cpp
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- Relatively fine-grained permission system.
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- Categories
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- Templates
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- FTS search
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- Caching
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Security
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========
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The most reasonable way would have been to add some sort sandboxing
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support right away, but this is lacking so far. As for "web security",
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all POST requests are centrally protected against CSRF attacks and all
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input is escaped against XSS attacks.
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Building
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========
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Dependencies:
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- cpp-httplib: https://github.com/yhirose/cpp-httplib
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- SqliteModernCpp: https://github.com/SqliteModernCpp
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Given the fact those are header-only libraries, they are already
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included here, so you only need to run:
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```make release```
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Setup
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=====
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To be written
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