That's just it. A minimalist, no-fuss pastebin clone server in golang. It supports only two operations:
- store a new paste, through a POST request
- retrieve a paste using its unique ID, through a GET request
what else do you need?
binnit
is a single executable with no dependencies. You don't
need a web server. You don't need a SQL server. You don't
need any external library.
binnit
serves pastes in the format:
http://<server_name>/abcdef1234567890
and stores them in a folder on the server, one file per paste, whose filename is identical to the paste ID. The unique ID of a paste is obtained from the SHA256 of the concatenation of title, time, and content. Rendering is minimal, on purpose, but based on a customisable template.
binnit
is currently configured through a simple key=value
configuration file, whose name can be specified on the command line
through the option -c <config_file>
. If no config file is specified,
binnit
looks for ./binnit.cfg
. The configurable options are:
- server_name (the FQDN where the service is reachable from outside)
- bind_addr (the address to listen on)
- bind_port (the port to bind)
- paste_dir (the folder where pastes are kept)
- templ_dir (the folder where HTML files and templates are kept)
- max_size (the maximum allowed length of a paste, in bytes. Larger pastes will be trimmed to that length.)
- log_file (path to the logfile)
As with other pastebin-like services, you can send a paste to binnit
using curl
. For instance, if your binnit
server is running on
http://servername.net
, you can paste a file there using:
curl -F 'paste=<myfile' http://servername.net
and obtain on output the ID associated to the newly created paste. Similarly
mylongcommand | curl -F 'paste=<-' http://servername.net
will paste the output of mylongcommand
to http://servername.net
,
and show on output the ID of the new paste.
There are hundreds of pastebin-like servers in the wild. But the overwhelming majority of them is overbloated software, depending on lots of libraries/frameworks/tools, providing a whole lot of useless features, and implying a useless amount of complexity.
A paste server must be able to do two things, 1) create a new paste
and return its ID, and 2) retrieve an existing paste using its
ID. binnit
does just and only these two things, in the simplest
possible way, without any external dependency. If you need more than
that, then binnit
is not for you. But do you really need anything
more?
It seems that perfection is attained not when there is nothing more to add, but when there is nothing more to remove (Antoine de Saint Exupéry)
binnit
is intended to be truly minimal. It consists of about 500
lines of golang source code in total, including:
- ~110 lines for License statements (comments)
- ~110 lines of core logic
- ~90 blank lines
- ~75 lines for template management
- ~75 lines for config management
- ~30 lines of pure comments
If you want to strip binnit
down even further, you could consider
removing:
- blank lines
- the external configuration file
- the template system
- sanity checks and error management
- logging
- code comments
You CANNOT remove the licence statements on each source file.
binnit
is Copyright (2017) by Vincenzo "KatolaZ" Nicosia.
binnit
is free software. You can use, modify, and redistribute it
under the terms of the GNU Affero General Public Licence, version 3 of
the Licence or, at your option, any later version. Please see
LICENSE.md for details.