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thttpd

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
thttpd
Original author(s)Jef Poskanzer
Stable release
2.29[1] Edit this on Wikidata / 23 May 2018
Written inC
Operating systemPOSIX
Available inEnglish
TypeWeb server
LicenseBSD licenses variant
Websitewww.acme.com/software/thttpd/

thttpd (tiny/turbo/throttling HTTP server) is an open source software web server from ACME Laboratories, designed for simplicity, a small execution footprint and speed.

Design and features

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thttpd is single-threaded and portable: it compiles cleanly on most Unix-like operating systems, including FreeBSD, SunOS 4, Solaris 2, BSD/OS, Linux, and OSF/1. It has an executable memory size of about 50 kB.[2] While it can be used as a simplified replacement to more feature-rich servers, it is uniquely suited to service high volume requests for static data—for example as an image hosting server. The first "t" in thttpd stands for variously tiny, turbo, or throttling.

thttpd has a bandwidth throttling feature which enables the server administrator to limit the maximum bit rate at which certain types of files may be transferred. For example, the administrator may choose to restrict the transfer of JPEG image files to at most 20 kilobytes per second. This prevents the connection from becoming saturated so that the server will still be responsive under heavy load, with the tradeoff that file transfer speed is reduced. thttpd did not support the X-Forwarded-For header[3][4]

Forks

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There are at least 2 public forks of thttpd:

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "thttpd - tiny/turbo/throttling HTTP server".
  2. ^ "Web Server Comparisons". acme.com.
  3. ^ "Welcome to NGINX Wiki! - NGINX". wiki.nginx.org.
  4. ^ Debian bug of thttpd does not respect X-Forward-For header (closed)
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