PagePark ======== I wrote this simple HTTP server to park domains I've bought but not yet used. It's written in JavaScript and runs in Node.js. Each domain is in its own folder. The content for that domain is in the folder. I went a little wild with content types, it can serve Markdown docs, or run JS code. And of course HTML, text files, images, movies, etc. Yet it's still very simple. Which is the point. ;-) It's 90 percent of what all web servers do, so if you learn how to run PagePark, you're learning how to run a web server. A real one you can use to host your sites. And it's easy to hack the code if you want to. #### How to 1. Create a folder to host your website. 2. Copy pagepark.js into that folder, and run it: node pagepark.js #### How it works 1. PagePark will automatically create a *prefs* sub-folder and a *domains* sub-folder. 2. Add your web content under domains. Each folder's name is the name of a domain. The contents within the folder are what we serve. Screen shot. 3. Serves all major media types including audio and video. Files whose names end with .md are passed through the built-in Markdown processor. Files ending with .js are interpreted as scripts. The text they return is what we serve. 4. The prefs folder contains a file of settings you can change, prefs.json. These include the port that the server runs on and the name of the index file (see below). 5. stats.json contains information generated by the server including the number of times the server has started, how many hits it's received (all time and today), and hits by domain. 6. mdTemplate.txt is the template we use to serve Markdown text. You can edit this file to provide a common template for all your Markdown documents. 7. If a request comes in for a folder, we scan the folder for a file whose name begins with *index* and serve the first one we find. So the index file can be HTML, Markdown or a script, or any other type PagePark can serve. 8. If you want to run PagePark from a folder different from the one that contains the app, set the *pageparkFolderPath* environment variable to point to that folder. 9. There are three special endpoints on all domains: /version, /now and /status that return the version of PagePark that's running, the time on the server and the stats and prefs. #### Screen shot Here's a screen shot of my PagePark server folder. #### Example pages http://noderunner.org/ -- simple home page http://lucky.wtf/ -- images http://lucky.wtf/test.md -- markdown page http://lucky.wtf/badass/ -- index file in a sub-directory http://lucky.wtf/badass/butt.js -- a page implemented in a script http://pagepark.io/ -- the home page for this product, served by the product http://karass.co/nosuchfile.html -- file not found http://pagepark.io/version -- the version of PagePark that's running on the server http://pagepark.io/now -- the time on the server #### JavaScript sample code I've iterated over the code to try to make it good sample code for JavaScript projects. I wanted to make code that could be used for people who are just getting started with Node, to help make the process easier. There will always be more work to do here. ;-) #### Updates ##### v0.47 1/7/15 by DW Added a package.json file to the repository. Fixed first-time startup problem creating prefs.json and stats.json. Also, we now make sure the *domains* folder exists at startup. Fixed a problem in handling requests if you specified a different folder for PagePark to serve from. #### Questions, comments? Please post a note on the Server Snacks mail list.