2.7 KiB
go-gemini
go-gemini
implements the Gemini protocol
in Go.
It aims to provide an API similar to that of net/http
to make it easy to
develop Gemini clients and servers.
Examples
There are a few examples provided in the examples
directory.
Some examples might require you to generate TLS certificates.
To run the examples:
go run -tags=example ./examples/server
Overview
A quick overview of the Gemini protocol:
- Client opens connection
- Server accepts connection
- Client and server complete a TLS handshake
- Client validates server certificate
- Client sends request
- Server sends response header
- Server sends response body (only for successful responses)
- Server closes connection
- Client handles response
The way this is implemented in this package is like so:
- Client makes a request with
NewRequest
. The client then sends the request with(*Client).Send(*Request) (*Response, error)
. The client then determines whether to trust the certificate (see Trust On First Use). - Server recieves the request and constructs a response.
The server calls the
Serve(*ResponseWriter, *Request)
method on theHandler
field. The handler writes the response. The server then closes the connection. - Client recieves the response as a
*Response
. The client then handles the response.
Trust On First Use
go-gemini
makes it easy to implement Trust On First Use in your clients.
The default client loads known hosts from $XDG_DATA_HOME/gemini/known_hosts
.
If that is all you need, you can simply use the top-level Send
function:
// Send uses the default client, which will load the default list of known hosts.
req := gemini.NewRequest("gemini://example.com")
gemini.Send(req)
Clients can also load their own list of known hosts:
client := &gmi.Client{}
if err := client.KnownHosts.LoadFrom("path/to/my/known_hosts"); err != nil {
log.Fatal(err)
}
Clients can then specify how to trust certificates in the TrustCertificate
field:
client.TrustCertificate = func(hostname string, cert *x509.Certificate, knownHosts *gmi.KnownHosts) error {
// If the certificate is in the known hosts list, allow the connection
return knownHosts.Lookup(hostname, cert)
}
Advanced clients can prompt the user for what to do when encountering an unknown
certificate. See examples/client
for an example.
Client Authentication
Gemini takes advantage of client certificates for authentication.
See examples/auth
for an example server which authenticates its users with a
username and password, and uses their client certificate to remember sessions.