slackbuilds/network/thttpd
Antonio Hernández Blas 60c75ff791 network/thttpd: Updated for version 2.26.
Signed-off-by: Willy Sudiarto Raharjo <willysr@slackbuilds.org>
2014-11-08 06:30:11 +07:00
..
patches network/thttpd: Updated for version 2.26. 2014-11-08 06:30:11 +07:00
README network/thttpd: Added (the tiny/turbo/throttling HTTP server) 2011-10-23 20:17:46 -02:00
doinst.sh network/thttpd: Added (the tiny/turbo/throttling HTTP server) 2011-10-23 20:17:46 -02:00
rc.thttpd network/thttpd: Added (the tiny/turbo/throttling HTTP server) 2011-10-23 20:17:46 -02:00
slack-desc various: Fix slack-desc formatting and comment nit picks. 2013-11-22 02:29:22 -05:00
thttpd.SlackBuild network/thttpd: Updated for version 2.26. 2014-11-08 06:30:11 +07:00
thttpd.conf network/thttpd: Updated for version 2.26. 2014-11-08 06:30:11 +07:00
thttpd.info network/thttpd: Updated for version 2.26. 2014-11-08 06:30:11 +07:00
thttpd.logrotate network/thttpd: Added (the tiny/turbo/throttling HTTP server) 2011-10-23 20:17:46 -02:00

README

thttpd is a simple, small, portable, fast, and secure HTTP server.
Simple: It handles only the minimum necessary to implement HTTP/1.1.
Well, maybe a little more than the minimum. Small: It has a very
small run-time size, since it does not fork and is very careful about
memory allocation. Portable: It compiles cleanly on most any
Unix-like OS. Fast: In typical use it's about as fast as the best
full-featured servers. Secure: It goes to great lengths to protect
the web server machine against attacks and breakins from other sites.

Notes:

By default the directory to serve through HTTP will be '/var/www/thttpd',
if you want to change it execute the SalckBuild as:
  # WEBDIR='/opt/www' sh thttpd.SlackBuild

To build and use this package the user/group 'thttpd' is required to
exists in your system. You can add it with:
  # groupadd -g 227 thttpd
  # useradd -u 227 -g 227 -c "User for thttpd" -d / -s /bin/false thttpd