Rustypaste is a minimal file upload/pastebin service.
$ echo "some text" > awesome.txt
$ curl -F "file=@awesome.txt" https://paste.site.com
https://paste.site.com/safe-toad.txt
$ curl https://paste.site.com/safe-toad.txt
some text
Table of Contents
- File upload & URL shortening & upload from URL
- supports basic HTTP authentication
- random file names (optional)
- pet name (e.g.
capital-mosquito.txt
) - alphanumeric string (e.g.
yB84D2Dv.txt
) - random suffix (e.g.
file.MRV5as.tar.gz
)
- pet name (e.g.
- supports expiring links
- auto-expiration of files (optional)
- auto-deletion of expired files (optional)
- supports one shot links/URLs (can only be viewed once)
- guesses MIME types
- supports overriding and blacklisting
- supports forcing to download via
?download=true
- no duplicate uploads (optional)
- listing/deleting files
- custom landing page
- Single binary
- Simple configuration
- supports hot reloading
- Easy to deploy
- No database
- filesystem is used
- Self-hosted
- centralization is bad!
- Written in Rust
- blazingly fast!
cargo install rustypaste
pacman -S rustypaste
rustypaste
is available for Alpine Edge. It can be installed via apk after enabling the community repository.
apk add rustypaste
pkg install rustypaste
See the available binaries on the releases page.
git clone https://github.com/orhun/rustypaste.git
cd rustypaste/
cargo build --release
shuttle
: enable an entry point for deploying on Shuttleopenssl
: use distro OpenSSL (binary size is reduced ~20% in release mode)rustls
: use rustls (enabled as default)
To enable a feature for build, pass --features
flag to cargo build
command.
For example, to reuse the OpenSSL present on a distro already:
cargo build --release --no-default-features --features openssl
cargo test -- --test-threads 1
./fixtures/test-fixtures.sh
The standalone command line tool (rpaste
) is available here.
function rpaste() {
curl -F "file=@$1" -H "Authorization: <auth_token>" "<server_address>"
}
* consider reading authorization headers from a file. (e.g. -H @rpaste_auth
)
# upload a file
$ rpaste x.txt
# paste from stdin
$ rpaste -
$ curl -F "file=@x.txt" -H "expire:10min" "<server_address>"
supported units:
nsec
,ns
usec
,us
msec
,ms
seconds
,second
,sec
,s
minutes
,minute
,min
,m
hours
,hour
,hr
,h
days
,day
,d
weeks
,week
,w
months
,month
,M
years
,year
,y
$ curl -F "oneshot=@x.txt" "<server_address>"
$ curl -F "oneshot_url=https://example.com" "<server_address>"
$ curl -F "url=https://example.com/some/long/url" "<server_address>"
$ curl -F "remote=https://example.com/file.png" "<server_address>"
Configure [paste].delete_expired_files
to set an interval for deleting the expired files automatically.
On the other hand, following script can be used as cron for cleaning up the expired files manually:
#!/bin/env sh
now=$(date +%s)
find upload/ -maxdepth 2 -type f -iname "*.[0-9]*" |
while read -r filename; do
[ "$(( ${filename##*.} / 1000 - "${now}" ))" -lt 0 ] && rm -v "${filename}"
done
Set delete_tokens
array in config.toml to activate the DELETE
endpoint and secure it with one (or more) auth token(s).
$ curl -H "Authorization: <auth_token>" -X DELETE "<server_address>/file.txt"
The
DELETE
endpoint will not be exposed and will return404
error ifdelete_tokens
are not set.
The generation of a random filename can be overridden by sending a header called filename
:
curl -F "file=@x.txt" -H "filename: <file_name>" "<server_address>"
To start the server:
$ rustypaste
If the configuration file is not found in the current directory, specify it via CONFIG
environment variable:
$ CONFIG="$HOME/.rustypaste.toml" rustypaste
To enable basic HTTP auth, set the AUTH_TOKEN
environment variable (via .env
):
$ echo "AUTH_TOKEN=$(openssl rand -base64 16)" > .env
$ rustypaste
There are 2 options for setting multiple auth tokens:
- Via the array field
[server].auth_tokens
in yourconfig.toml
. - Or by writing a newline separated list to a file and passing its path to rustypaste via
AUTH_TOKENS_FILE
andDELETE_TOKENS_FILE
respectively.
If neither
AUTH_TOKEN
,AUTH_TOKENS_FILE
nor[server].auth_tokens
are set, the server will not require any authentication.Exception is the
DELETE
endpoint, which requires at least one token to be set. See deleting files from server for more information.
See config.toml for configuration options.
Set expose_list
to true in config.toml to be able to retrieve a JSON formatted list of files in your uploads directory. This will not include oneshot files, oneshot URLs, or URLs.
$ curl "http://<server_address>/list"
[{"file_name":"accepted-cicada.txt","file_size":241,"expires_at_utc":null}]
This route will require an AUTH_TOKEN
if one is set.
It is possible to use an HTML form for uploading files. To do so, you need to update two fields in your config.toml
:
- Set the
[landing_page].content_type
totext/html; charset=utf-8
. - Update the
[landing_page].text
field with your HTML form or point[landing_page].file
to your html file.
For an example, see examples/html_form.toml
Following command can be used to run a container which is built from the Dockerfile in this repository:
$ docker run --rm -d \
-v "$(pwd)/upload/":/app/upload \
-v "$(pwd)/config.toml":/app/config.toml \
--env-file "$(pwd)/.env" \
-e "RUST_LOG=debug" \
-p 8000:8000 \
--name rustypaste \
orhunp/rustypaste
- uploaded files go into
./upload
(on the host machine) - set the
AUTH_TOKEN
via-e
or--env-file
to enable auth
You can build this image using docker build -t rustypaste .
command.
If you want to run the image using docker compose, simply run docker-compose up -d
. (see docker-compose.yml)
Example server configuration with reverse proxy:
server {
listen 80;
location / {
proxy_pass http://localhost:8000/;
proxy_set_header Host $host;
proxy_set_header X-Forwarded-For $remote_addr;
proxy_set_header X-Forwarded-Proto $scheme;
add_header X-XSS-Protection "1; mode=block";
add_header X-Frame-Options "sameorigin";
add_header X-Content-Type-Options "nosniff";
}
}
If you get a 413 Request Entity Too Large
error during upload, set the max body size in nginx.conf
:
http {
# ...
client_max_body_size 100M;
}
Pull requests are welcome!
Consider submitting your ideas via issues first and check out the existing issues.
All code is licensed under The MIT License.