|
So here is what has been keeping me up at night: At some point I
realized that nix actually made a somewhat passable language for CGI
programming:
* That `builtins.getEnv` exists as one of the impurities of Nix is
perfect as environment variables are the main way of communication
from the web server to the CGI application.
* We can actually read from the filesystem via builtins.readDir and
builtins.readFile with bearable overhead if we avoid importing the
used paths into the nix store.
* Templating and routing are convenient to implement via indented strings
and attribute sets respectively.
Of course there are obvious limitation:
* The overhead of derivations is probably much to great for them to be
useful via IfD.
* Even without derivations, nix evaluation is very slow to the point
were a trivial application takes between 100ms and 400ms to produce a
response.
* We can't really cause effects other than producing a response which
makes it not viable for a lot of applications. There are some ways
around this:
* With a custom interpreter we could have streaming and multiplexed
I/O (using lazy lists emulated via attrsets) to cause such effects,
but it would probably perform terribly.
* We can use builtins.fetchurl to call other HTTP-based microservices,
but only in very limited constraints, i. e. only GET, no headers,
and only if the tarball ttl is set to 0 in the global nix.conf.
* Terrible error handling capabilities because builtins.tryEval actually
doesn't catch a lot of errors.
To prove that it actually works, there are some demo applications,
which I invite you to run and potentially break horribly:
nix-build -A web.bubblegum.examples && ./result
# navigate to http://localhost:9000
The setup uses thttpd and executes the nix CGI scripts using
users.sterni.nint which automatically passed `depot`, so they can
import the cgi library.
Change-Id: I3a22a749612211627e5f8301c31ec2e7a872812c
Reviewed-on: https://cl.tvl.fyi/c/depot/+/2746
Tested-by: BuildkiteCI
Reviewed-by: tazjin <mail@tazj.in>
|