# getwtxt  [![Build Status](https://travis-ci.com/getwtxt/getwtxt.svg?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.com/getwtxt/getwtxt) [![Go Report Card](https://goreportcard.com/badge/github.com/getwtxt/getwtxt)](https://goreportcard.com/report/github.com/getwtxt/getwtxt) [![Code Climate Maintainability](https://api.codeclimate.com/v1/badges/0e48bd9002de0f84b24e/maintainability)](https://codeclimate.com/github/getwtxt/getwtxt/maintainability) twtxt registry written in Go! [twtxt](https://github.com/buckket/twtxt) is a decentralized microblogging platform "for hackers" based on text files. The user is "followed" and "mentioned" by referencing the URL to their `twtxt.txt` file and a nickname. Registries are designed to aggregate several users' statuses into a single location, facilitating the discovery of new users to follow and allowing the search of statuses for tags and key words.           \[ [Installation](#installation) \]     \[ [Configuration](#configuration) \]     \[ [Using the Registry](#using-the-registry) \]     \[ [Benchmarks](#benchmarks) \]     \[ [Other Documentation](#other-documentation) \]     \[ [Notes](#notes) \] ## Features  [![GitHub release](https://img.shields.io/github/release/getwtxt/getwtxt.svg)](https://github.com/getwtxt/getwtxt/releases/latest) * Easy to set up and maintain * Uses an in-memory cache to serve requests * Pushes to a database at a configurable interval for persistent storage * `leveldb (default)` * `sqlite3` * More database support is in development * Run directly facing the internet or behind `Caddy` / `nginx` * Optional `TLS` support * Optional hostname matching (serve requests for eg. `twtxt.example.com` without a reverse proxy) A public instance is currently available: * [twtxt.tilde.institute](https://twtxt.tilde.institute) ## Installation I have only personally tested getwtxt on Linux, specifically: * `Debian 9, 10/Testing, Sid` * `Ubuntu Server 18.04LTS, 18.10, 19.04` Build dependencies are minimal, and only include: * `gnu make` * `go >= 1.11` * `git` First, fetch the sources using `git` and jump into the directory. ``` $ git clone git://github.com/getwtxt/getwtxt.git ... $ cd getwtxt ``` Then, check out the latest release tag. This will be the same tag listed on the badge under the [Features](#features) section heading. ``` $ git checkout v0.0.0 ``` Or, if you want to be a `git` ninja, you can use this to just check out whatever the latest tag is: ``` $ git checkout $(git describe --tags --abbrev=0) ``` Optionally, use the `go` tool to test and benchmark the files in `svc`. If you choose to run the tests, be sure to return to the main directory afterwards. ``` $ cd svc && go test -v -bench . -benchmem ... ... PASS $ cd .. ``` Use `make` to initiate the build and install process. ``` $ make ... $ sudo make install ``` ## Configuration \[ [Proxying](#proxying) \]   \[ [Starting getwtxt](#starting-getwtxt) \] To configure getwtxt, you'll first need to open `/usr/local/getwtxt/getwtxt.yml` in your favorite editor and modify any values necessary. There are comments in the file explaining each option. If you desire, you may additionally modify the template in `/usr/local/getwtxt/assets/tmpl/index.html` to customize the page users will see when they pull up your registry instance in a web browser. The values in the configuration file under `Instance:` are used to replace text `{{.Like This}}` in the template. ### Proxying Though getwtxt will run perfectly fine facing the internet directly, it does not understand virtual hosts, nor does it use TLS (yet). You'll probably want to proxy it behind `Caddy` or `nginx` for this reason. `Caddy` is ludicrously easy to set up, and automatically handles `TLS` certificates. Here's the config: ```caddyfile twtxt.example.com proxy / example.com:9001 ``` If you're using `nginx`, here's a skeleton config to get you started. Don't forget to change the 5 instances of `twtxt.example.com` to the (sub)domain you'll be using to access the registry, generate SSL/TLS certificates using `letsencrypt`, and change the port in `proxy_pass` to whichever port you specified when modifying the configuration file. Currently, it's set to the default port `9001` ```nginx server { server_name twtxt.example.com; listen [::]:443 ssl http2; listen 0.0.0.0:443 ssl http2; ssl_certificate /etc/letsencrypt/live/twtxt.example.com/fullchain.pem; ssl_certificate_key /etc/letsencrypt/live/twtxt.example.com/privkey.pem; include /etc/letsencrypt/options-ssl-nginx.conf; ssl_dhparam /etc/letsencrypt/ssl-dhparams.pem; location / { proxy_set_header Host $host; proxy_set_header X-Forwarded-For $remote_addr; proxy_pass http://127.0.0.1:9001; } } server { if ($host = twtxt.example.com) { return 301 https://$host$request_uri; } listen 80; server_name twtxt.example.com; return 404; } ``` ### Starting getwtxt Once you have everything configured to your needs, use `systemctl` to enable it to run on system boot, then start the service. ``` $ sudo systemctl enable getwtxt ... $ sudo systemctl start getwtxt ``` ## Using the Registry The following examples will all apply to using `curl` from a `Linux`, `BSD`, or `macOS` terminal. All timestamps are in `RFC3339` format, per the twtxt registry specification. Additionally, all queries support the `?page=N` parameter, where `N` is a positive integer, that will retrieve page `N` of results in groups of twenty. The example API calls can also be found on the landing page of any getwtxt instance, assuming the admin has not customized the landing page. * [twtxt.tilde.institute](https://twtxt.tilde.institute) ### Adding a User Both nickname and URL are required ``` $ curl -X POST 'https://twtxt.example.com/api/plain/users?url=https://mysite.ext/twtxt.txt&nickname=FooJr' 200 OK ``` ### Get All Tweets ``` $ curl 'https://twtxt.example.com/api/plain/tweets' foo_barrington https://foo.bar.ext/twtxt.txt 2019-03-01T09:31:02.000Z Hey! It's my first status! ... ... ``` ### Query Tweets by Keyword ``` $ curl 'https://twtxt.example.com/api/plain/tweets?q=getwtxt' foo_barrington https://example3.com/twtxt.txt 2019-04-30T06:00:09.000Z I just installed getwtxt! ``` ### Get All Users Timestamp reflects when the user was added to the registry. ``` $ curl 'https://twtxt.example.com/api/plain/users' foo_barrington https://foo.barrington.ext/twtxt.txt 2017-01-01T09:17:02.000Z foo_barrington_jr https://example.com/twtxt.txt 2019-03-01T09:31:02.000Z ... ... ``` ### Query Users Can use either keyword or URL. ``` $ curl 'https://twtxt.example.com/api/plain/users?url=https://example.com/twtxt.txt' foo https://example.com/twtxt.txt 2019-05-09T08:42:23.000Z $ curl 'https://twtxt.example.com/api/plain/users?q=foo' foo https://example.com/twtxt.txt 2019-05-09T08:42:23.000Z foobar https://example2.com/twtxt.txt 2019-03-14T19:23:00.000Z foo_barrington https://example3.com/twtxt.txt 2019-05-01T15:59:39.000Z ``` ### Get all tweets with mentions Mentions are placed within a status using the format `@` ``` $ curl 'https://twtxt.tilde.institute/api/plain/mentions' foo https://example.com/twtxt.txt 2019-02-28T11:06:44.000Z @ Hey!! Are you still working on that project? bar https://mxmmplm.com/twtxt.txt 2019-02-27T11:06:44.000Z @ How's your day going, bud? foo_barrington https://example3.com/twtxt.txt 2019-02-26T11:06:44.000Z @ Did you eat my lunch? ``` ### Query tweets by mention URL ``` $ curl 'https://twtxt.tilde.institute/api/plain/mentions?url=https://foobarrington.co.uk/twtxt.txt' foo https://example.com/twtxt.txt 2019-02-26T11:06:44.000Z @ Hey!! Are you still working on that project?e ``` ### Get all Tags ``` $ curl 'https://twtxt.example.com/api/plain/tags' foo https://example.com/twtxt.txt 2019-03-01T09:33:04.000Z No, seriously, I need #help foo https://example.com/twtxt.txt 2019-03-01T09:32:12.000Z Seriously, I love #programming! foo https://example.com/twtxt.txt 2019-03-01T09:31:02.000Z I love #programming! ``` ### Query by Tag ``` $ curl 'https://twtxt.example.com/api/plain/tags/programming' foo https://example.com/twtxt.txt 2019-03-01T09:31:02.000Z I love #programming! ``` ## Benchmarks * [bombardier](https://github.com/codesenberg/bombardier) ``` $ bombardier -c 100 -n 200000 http://localhost:9001/api/plain/tweets Bombarding http://localhost:9001/api/plain/tweets with 200000 request(s) using 100 connection(s) 200000 / 200000 [=============================================================] 100.00% 19961/s 10s Done! Statistics Avg Stdev Max Reqs/sec 20006.58 2408.55 26054.73 Latency 5.00ms 3.58ms 62.99ms HTTP codes: 1xx - 0, 2xx - 200000, 3xx - 0, 4xx - 0, 5xx - 0 others - 0 Throughput: 39.27MB/s ``` ## Other Documentation In addition to what is provided here, additional information, particularly regarding the configuration file, may be found by running getwtxt with the `-m` or `--manual` flags. You will likely want to pipe the output to `less` as it is quite long. ``` $ ./getwtxt -m | less $ ./getwtxt --manual | less ``` If you need to remove getwtxt from your system, navigate to the source directory you acquired using `git` during the installation process and run the appropriate `make` hook: ``` $ sudo make uninstall ``` ## Notes twtxt Information: [`twtxt.readthedocs.io`](https://twtxt.readthedocs.io) twtxt Client Repo: [`github.com/buckket/twtxt`](https://github.com/buckket/twtxt) Registry Specification: [`twtxt.readthedocs.io/en/latest/user/registry.html`](https://twtxt.readthedocs.io/en/latest/user/registry.html) Special thanks to [`github.com/kognise/water.css`](https://github.com/kognise/water.css) for open-sourcing a pleasant, easy-to-use, importable stylesheet ### Contributing All contributions are greatly appreciated! Please open an issue, submit a pull request, anything. If you're interested in contributing, take a look at the github project page for getwtxt, linked below, where I've listed various items I'm working on or plan to work on in the very near future. It'll give you some inspiration for pull requests to submit. If you have an idea for a new feature or come across a bug, submitting a new issue will be greatly appreciated as well. * [getwtxt Development: the road to 1.0.0](https://github.com/getwtxt/getwtxt/projects/1) * [open an issue](https://github.com/getwtxt/getwtxt/issues)