create-servers

3.3.0 • Public • Published

create-servers

Create an http AND/OR an https server and call the same request handler.

Usage

The create-servers module exports a function that takes a config object and a node-style callback. The config object must have at minimum an http or https property (or both). The following config properties are supported:

Property Description
handler Request handler to be used for any server, unless overridden specifically with http.handler or https.handler.
timeout Socket timeout in milliseconds for any server, unless overridden with http.timeout or https.timeout. Defaults to the node default of 2 minutes.
keepAliveTimeout Milliseconds of activity before sockets are destroyed. Defaults to the node default value (currently 5 seconds).
http Optional. If present, an HTTP server is started. This can be an object or a number. If it's a number, it's used as the TCP port for an HTTP server. You may also use an Array to start multiple servers.
http.port TCP port for the HTTP server. Defaults to 80.
http.host The address the HTTP server is bound to. Defaults to :: or 0.0.0.0.
http.timeout Socket timeout in milliseconds for the server. If unspecified, the top-level timeout configuration is used.
http.keepAliveTimeout Overrides the top-level keepAliveTimeout setting if specified.
http.handler Handler for HTTP requests. If you want to share a handler with all servers, use a top-level handler config property instead.
https Optional object. If present, an HTTPS server is started. You may start multiple HTTPS servers by passing an array of objects
https.port TCP port for the HTTPS server. Defaults to 443.
https.host The address the HTTPS server is bound to. Defaults to :: or 0.0.0.0.
https.timeout Socket timeout in milliseconds for the server. If unspecified, the top-level timeout configuration is used.
https.keepAliveTimeout Overrides the top-level keepAliveTimeout setting if specified.
https.ciphers Defaults to a default cipher suite. To customize, either supply a colon-separated string or array of strings for the ciphers you want the server to support.
https.honorCipherOrder If true, prefer the server's specified cipher order instead of the client's. Defaults to false.
https.root Root directory for certificate/key files. See Certificate normalization for more details.
https.key PEM/file path for the server's private key. See Certificate normalization for more details.
https.cert PEM/file path(s) for the server's certificate. See Certificate normalization for more details.
https.ca Cert or array of certs specifying trusted authorities for peer certificates. Only required if your server accepts client certificate connections signed by authorities that are not trusted by default. See Certificate normalization for more details.
https.sni See SNI Support.
https.handler Handler for HTTPS requests. If you want to share a handler with all servers, use a top-level handler config property instead.
https.* Any other properties supported by https.createServer can be added to the https object, except secureProtocol and secureOptions which are set to recommended values.
http2 Optional object. If present, an HTTP/2 server is started. You may start multiple HTTP/2 servers by passing an array of objects
http2.allowHTTP1 Enable ALPN negotiation allowing support for both HTTPS and HTTP/2 on the same socket.
http2.* The same https security options are allowed, as well as any other properties supported by http2.createSecureServer.

If successful, the create-servers callback is passed an object with the following properties:

Property Description
http The HTTP server that was created, if any. If creating multiple servers, this will be an Array.
https The HTTPS server that was created, if any. If creating multiple servers, this will be an Array.

Certificate Normalization

create-servers provides some conveniences for https.ca, https.key, and https.cert config properties. You may use PEM data directly (inside a Buffer or string) or a file name. When using a file name, you must also set an https.root config property if using relative paths to cert/key files.

https.ca, https.cert, and https.key also support specifying an Array. Given an array for cert, you must have a matching array for key so each cert can be matched with its private key.

const createServers = require('create-servers');

createServers({
  https: {
    root: '/cert/path',
    cert: ['cert1.crt', 'cert2.crt'],
    key: ['cert1.key', 'cert2.key']
  }
}, err => {
  // ...
})

If you have a cert that is signed by an intermediate CA, your server will need to append the untrusted parts of the CA chain with your cert. To make this more convenient, create-servers lets you use an array to automatically create a chain.

const createServers = require('create-servers');

createServers({
  https: {
    root: '/cert/path',
    cert: ['cert.crt', 'intermediate.crt'],
    key: 'cert.key'
  }
}, err => {
  // ...
})

If you are specifying multiple certs and you want to create chains for each, use an array of arrays.

const createServers = require('create-servers');

createServers({
  https: {
    root: '/cert/path',
    cert: [['cert1.crt', 'intermediate.crt'], 'cert2.crt'],
    key: ['cert1.key', 'cert2.key']
  }
}, err => {
  // ...
})

SNI Support

Server Name Indication, or SNI, lets HTTPS clients announce which hostname they wish to connect to before the server sends its certificate, enabling the use of the same server for multiple hosts. Although SNICallback can be used to support this, you lose the convenient certificate normalization provided by create-servers. The sni config option provides an easier way.

The sni option is an object with each key being a supported hostname and each value being a subset of the HTTPS settings listed above. HTTPS settings defined at the top level are used as defaults for the hostname-specific settings.

const createServers = require('create-servers');

createServers(
  {
    https: {
      port: 443,
      sni: {
        'example1.com': {
          key: '/certs/private/example1.com.key',
          cert: '/certs/public/example1.com.crt'
        },
        'example2.com': {
          key: '/certs/private/example2.com.key',
          cert: '/certs/public/example2.com.crt'
        }
      }
    },
    handler: function (req, res) {
      res.end('Hello');
    }
  },
  function (errs) {
    if (errs) {
      return console.log(errs.https);
    }

    console.log('Listening on 443');
  }
);

Use * in the hostname for wildcard certs. Example: *.example.com. The following settings are supported in the host-specific configuration:

NOTE on Security

Inspired by iojs and a well written article, we have defaulted our ciphers to support "perfect-forward-security" as well as removing insecure cipher suites from being a possible choice. With this in mind, be aware that we will no longer support ie6 on windows XP by default.

Examples

http

var createServers = require('create-servers');

var servers = createServers(
  {
    http: 80,
    handler: function (req, res) {
      res.end('http only');
    }
  },
  function (errs) {
    if (errs) {
      return console.log(errs.http);
    }

    console.log('Listening on 80');
  }
);

https

var servers = createServers(
  {
    https: {
      port: 443,
      root: '/path/to/ssl/files',
      key: 'your-key.pem',
      cert: 'your-cert.pem',
      ca: 'your-ca.pem' // Can be an Array of CAs
    },
    handler: function (req, res) {
      res.end('https only');
    }
  },
  function (errs) {
    if (errs) {
      return console.log(errs.https);
    }

    console.log('Listening on 443');
  }
);

http && https

var servers = createServers(
  {
    http: 80,
    https: {
      port: 443,
      root: '/path/to/ssl/files',
      key: 'your-key.pem',
      cert: 'your-cert.pem',
      ca: 'your-ca.pem' // Can be an Array of CAs
    },
    handler: function (req, res) {
      res.end('http AND https');
    }
  },
  function (errs, servers) {
    if (errs) {
      return Object.keys(errs).forEach(function (key) {
        console.log('Error ' + key + ': ' + errs[key]);
        if (servers[key]) {
          servers[key].close();
        }
      });
    }

    console.log('Listening on 80 and 443');
  }
);

http && https (different handlers)

var servers = createServers(
  {
    http: {
      port: 80,
      handler: function (req, res) {
        res.end('http');
      }
    },
    https: {
      port: 443,
      root: '/path/to/ssl/files',
      key: 'your-key.pem',
      cert: 'your-cert.pem',
      ca: 'your-ca.pem', // Can be an Array of CAs
      handler: function (req, res) {
        res.end('https');
      }
    }
  },
  function (errs, servers) {
    if (errs) {
      return Object.keys(errs).forEach(function (key) {
        console.log('Error ' + key + ': ' + errs[key]);
        if (servers[key]) {
          servers[key].close();
        }
      });
    }

    console.log('Listening on 80 and 443');
  }
);

Author: Charlie Robbins

License: MIT

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Version

3.3.0

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