05-17-2016
I prefer booting off a different hard drive for each OS these days and currently use OSX and my primary unix desktop and boot off a micro SC card when I want another OS (and my backup OSX system is on a micro SD card) ... just seems easier to me... but VMWARE, etc are more sexy and I am sure better; but I just find having OS on different disks / media and booting as required easier for me....
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LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
micro-httpd
micro-httpd(8) User Commands micro-httpd(8)
NAME
micro-httpd - really small HTTP server
SYNOPSIS
micro-httpd DIRECTORY
OPTIONS
None.
DESCRIPTION
micro-httpd is a very small HTTP server all in 150 lines of code. It runs from inetd, which means its performance is poor. But for low-
traffic sites, it is quite adequate. It implements all the basic features of an HTTP server, including:
* Security against ".." filename snooping.
* The common MIME types.
* Trailing-slash redirection.
* index.html
* Directory listings.
To install it, add a line like this to /etc/inetd.conf:
micro-http stream tcp nowait nobody
/usr/sbin/micro-httpd micro-httpd dir
Make sure the path to the executable is correct, and change "dir" to be the directory you want to serve. You could add line like this to
/etc/services:
micro-http port/tcp #Micro HTTP server
Change "port" to the port number you want to use: 80, 8000, whatever. Restart inetd by sending it a "HUP" signal.
On some systems, inetd has a maximum spawn rate - if you try to run inetd services faster than a certain number of times per minute, it
assumed there is either a bug of an attack going on and it shuts down for a few minutes. If you run into this problem - look for syslog
messages about too-rapid looping - you will need to find out how to increase the limit. Unfortunately this varies from OS to OS. On
FreeBSD, you add a "-R 10000" flag to inetd's initial command line. On some Linux systems, you can set the limit on a per-service basis in
inetd.conf, by changing "nowait" to "nowait.10000".
Note that you can use micro-httpd to serve HTTPS, if you like, by running it from stunnel. First fetch and install stunnel - FreeBSD users
can just go to /usr/ports/security/stunnel and do a "make cert ; make install". Then as root run:
stunnel -p /usr/local/certs/stunnel.pem -d 443 -l
/usr/sbin/micro-httpd -- micro-httpd dir
Make sure the paths to the certificate and executable are correct, and again don not forget to change "dir" to the directory you want to
serve.
ENVIRONMENT
None.
FILES
None.
SEE ALSO
inetd(8) micro-inetd(8) xinetd(8)
AUTHORS
Copyright (C) 1999 Jef Poskanzer <jef@mail.acme.com>. All rights reserved.
This manual page was updated by Jari Aalto <jari.aalto@cante.net>. Released under license GNU GPL v2 or (at your option) any later
version. For more information about license, visit <http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/gpl.html>.
micro-httpd 2012-04-03 micro-httpd(8)