Crates.io | urshort |
lib.rs | urshort |
version | 0.1.1 |
source | src |
created_at | 2022-09-26 05:24:22.172948 |
updated_at | 2022-09-26 05:24:22.172948 |
description | A blazingly fast and amazingly simple URL shortener designed for self-hosters. |
homepage | https://github.com/mirdaki/urshort |
repository | https://github.com/mirdaki/urshort |
max_upload_size | |
id | 673973 |
size | 58,332 |
A blazingly fast and amazingly simple URL shortener designed for self-hosters.
Support regular vanity URI mappings as well as (Perl style) regex based mapping!
It uses environmental variables to configure all matches and loads them into an in-memory model for near instant access! Designed for hosting with containers and for individual use.
Use the standard Rust tools. There is also a Dev Container if you would prefer to run it that way.
cargo build
# Also recommended for linting suggestions
cargo clippy
# And for consistent formatting
cargo fmt
For creating the Docker container. Use the included Dockerfile and this:
docker build -t urshort:latest .
It is recommended to use Docker to use URShort:
docker pull mirdaki/urshort
If you have prefer, you can also install it via cargo:
cargo install urshort
Or download directly from the releases.
As all configuration is stored in environmental variables, it is recommenced to store them in an .env
file for ease of tracking and updating. For example:
URSHORT_STANDARD_URI_test=https://example.com/
URSHORT_STANDARD_URI_test2=https://example.com/2
URSHORT_PATTERN_REGEX_0='^i(?P<index>\d+)$'
URSHORT_PATTERN_URI_0='https://example.com/$index'
URSHORT_PATTERN_REGEX_1='^(\d+)$'
URSHORT_PATTERN_URI_1='https://example.com/$1'
A standard vanity mapping would do something like: hello -> example.com/hello
Using this config:
hello
https://example.com/hello
This is stored in a single environmental variable:
# <> is used to indicate the values to be changes
URSHORT_STANDARD_URI_<path>=<redirect>
# Actual example
URSHORT_STANDARD_URI_test=https://example.com/
Standard mappings will override any regex mapping.
A single regex pattern mapping could do something like:
i1 -> example.com/1
i42 -> example.com/42
i9001 -> example.com/9001
...
Using this config:
'^i(?P<index>\d+)$'
'https://example.com/$index'
This is stored in two single environmental variables. The first contains
# <> is used to indicate the values to be changes
# The first environmental variable determines the place in which the pattern is evaluated and the regex for that pattern
URSHORT_PATTERN_REGEX_<place>='<regex>'
# The second environmental variable must match the place of the first and contains the pattern redirect
URSHORT_PATTERN_URI_<place>='<redirect>'
# Actual example
URSHORT_PATTERN_REGEX_0='^i(?P<index>\d+)$'
URSHORT_PATTERN_URI_0='https://example.com/$index'
Be sure to quote the values. Be careful with the order you have the mappings.
You can specify a port the service will use. If not give, the default of 54027
will be used.
This is useful when running the service directly. If you use Docker, it is recommended to use the built in port mapping features instead of this.
Example environmental variable: URSHORT_PORT=7777
Please use a web server, such as Nginx or Traefik in front of URShort.
Docker compose is the recommended way to run URShort. An example file is here. Load that file with your .env
file and run:
docker-compose up
You can also use the Docker run command directly:
docker run -d \
--name=urshort \
-p 54027:54027 \
-e URSHORT_STANDARD_URI_test=https://example.com/ \
-e URSHORT_PATTERN_REGEX_0='^i(?P<index>\d+)$' \
-e URSHORT_PATTERN_URI_0='https://example.com/$index' \
--restart unless-stopped \
mirdaki/urshort:latest
Or if you have the bare executable, run urshort
at the location of you .env
file (or after your configuration is loaded directly into the environment).
Thank you to all the projects that helped make this possible!
Please read CONTRIBUTING.md for how to contribute to the project.
This project is licensed under the MIT License - see the LICENSE.md file for details.