RESTinio is a header-only C++14 library that gives you an embedded HTTP/Websocket server. It is based on standalone version of ASIO and targeted primarily for asynchronous processing of HTTP-requests. Since v.0.4.1 Boost::ASIO (1.66 or higher) is also supported (see notes on building with Boost::ASIO).
Consider the task of writing a C++ application that must support some REST API, RESTinio represents our solution for that task. Currently it is in stable beta state. Lets see how it feels like in the simplest case:
#include <restinio/all.hpp>
int main()
{
restinio::run(
restinio::on_this_thread()
.port(8080)
.address("localhost")
.request_handler([](auto req) {
return req->create_response().set_body("Hello, World!").done();
}));
return 0;
}
Server runs on the main thread, and respond to all requests with hello-world message. Of course you've got an access to the structure of a given HTTP request, so you can apply a complex logic for handling requests.
- Async request handling. Cannot get the response data immediately? That's ok, store request handle somewhere and/or pass it to another execution context and get back to it when the data is ready.
- HTTP pipelining. Works well with async request handling. It might increase your server throughput dramatically.
- Timeout control. RESTinio can take care of bad connection that are like: send "GET /" and then just stuck.
- Response builders. Need chunked-encoded body - then RESTinio has a special response builder for you (obviously it is not the only builder).
- ExpressJS-like request routing (see an example below).
- An experimental typesafe request router that allows avoiding problems of ExpressJS-like router with help of static checks from C++ compiler.
- Working with query string parameters.
- Several ready-to-use helpers for working with HTTP headers (for example, the support for HTTP headers related to file uploading).
- Supports sending files and its parts (with sendfile on linux/unix and TransmitFile on windows).
- Supports compression (deflate, gzip).
- Supports TLS (HTTPS).
- Basic websocket support. Simply restinio::websocket::basic::upgrade() the request handle and start websocket session on a corresponding connection.
- Can run on external asio::io_context. RESTinio is separated from execution context.
- Some tune options. One can set acceptor and socket options. When running RESTinio on a pool of threads connections can be accepted in parallel.
#include <restinio/all.hpp>
using namespace restinio;
template<typename T>
std::ostream & operator<<(std::ostream & to, const optional_t<T> & v) {
if(v) to << *v;
return to;
}
int main() {
// Create express router for our service.
auto router = std::make_unique<router::express_router_t<>>();
router->http_get(
R"(/data/meter/:meter_id(\d+))",
[](auto req, auto params) {
const auto qp = parse_query(req->header().query());
return req->create_response()
.set_body(
fmt::format("meter_id={} (year={}/mon={}/day={})",
cast_to<int>(params["meter_id"]),
opt_value<int>(qp, "year"),
opt_value<int>(qp, "mon"),
opt_value<int>(qp, "day")))
.done();
});
router->non_matched_request_handler(
[](auto req){
return req->create_response(restinio::status_not_found()).connection_close().done();
});
// Launching a server with custom traits.
struct my_server_traits : public default_single_thread_traits_t {
using request_handler_t = restinio::router::express_router_t<>;
};
restinio::run(
restinio::on_this_thread<my_server_traits>()
.address("localhost")
.request_handler(std::move(router)));
return 0;
}
RESTinio is distributed under BSD-3-CLAUSE license.
The full documentation for RESTinio can be found here.
- Issues and bugs: Issue Tracker on GitHub.
- Discussion group: restinio.