Rack proxy server for development
This is an (almost) complete rewrite of Prax
in Crystal, a Ruby-inspired language that compiles
down to LLVM. This version should avoid problems with version managers, since Prax
is now a binary application that don't rely on Ruby anymore (except for Rack and
rackup
).
Please refer to the wiki for more information:
You can download a Debian / Ubuntu package for 64bits kernel on the releases page. For other systems, you'll have to follow the Manual Install Guide.
- resolves
*.dev
domains to 127.0.0.1 / ::1 (localhost) - redirects the :80 and :443 ports to :20559 and :20558
- receives incoming HTTP requests and extracts the hostname (eg: myapp.dev)
- spawns a Rack applications (found at
~/.prax/myapp
) if any - proxies the request to the spawned Rack aplication or to the specified port.
Prax proposes 2 solutions to resolve .dev
domains:
- an NSSwitch extension, only compatible wih glibc and no longer compatible with Google Chrome/Chromium;
- a dnsmasq configuration, either throught NetworkManager or by installing dnsmasq manually (eg. through your Linux distribution package).
Prax also supports http://xip.io domains, so you may use
myapp.129.168.0.1.xip.io
for example. This is very useful when using an
external device like a smartphone or tablet or another computer.
The port redirections are iptables rules, that are installed and removed using
an initd script. The script redirects the port :80 and :443 on 127.0.0.1 and for
each wlanX
and ethX
devices found on your machine, to allow incoming
traffic, so you may use xip.io to test on external devices, as mentioned above.
Prax is distributed under the CeCILL 2.1 license. Please see LICENSE for details.
HTML templates for rendering errors are from Pow!!, by Sam Stephenson and Basecamp, and are under the MIT license.
The NSSwitch extension originaly come from Hoof, by pyromaniac, and is under the MIT license.
- Julien Portalier [email protected]
Prax wouldn't exist without Pow!! by Sam Stephenson and Basecamp. Prax is nothing more but a reimplementation (in another language) with Linux compatibility in mind.