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#
# MicroPython http_server_simplistic.py example
#
# This example shows how to write the smallest possible HTTP
# server in MicroPython. With comments and convenience code
# removed, this example can be compressed literally to ten
# lines. There's a catch though - read comments below for
# details, and use this code only for quick hacks, preferring
# http_server.py for "real thing".
#
try:
import usocket as socket
except:
import socket
CONTENT = b"""\
HTTP/1.0 200 OK
Hello #%d from MicroPython!
"""
def main():
s = socket.socket()
# Bind to (allow to be connected on ) all interfaces. This means
# this server will be accessible to other hosts on your local
# network, and if your server has direct (non-firewalled) connection
# to the Internet, then to anyone on the Internet. We bind to all
# interfaces to let this example work easily on embedded MicroPython
# targets, which you will likely access from another machine on your
# local network. Take care when running this on an Internet-connected
# machine though! Replace "0.0.0.0" with "127.0.0.1" if in doubt, to
# make the server accessible only on the machine it runs on.
ai = socket.getaddrinfo("0.0.0.0", 8080)
print("Bind address info:", ai)
addr = ai[0][-1]
# A port on which a socket listened remains inactive during some time.
# This means that if you run this sample, terminate it, and run again
# you will likely get an error. To avoid this timeout, set SO_REUSEADDR
# socket option.
s.setsockopt(socket.SOL_SOCKET, socket.SO_REUSEADDR, 1)
s.bind(addr)
s.listen(5)
print("Listening, connect your browser to http://<this_host>:8080/")
counter = 0
while True:
res = s.accept()
client_s = res[0]
client_addr = res[1]
print("Client address:", client_addr)
print("Client socket:", client_s)
# We assume here that .recv() call will read entire HTTP request
# from client. This is usually true, at least on "big OS" systems
# like Linux/MacOS/Windows. But that doesn't have to be true in
# all cases, in particular on embedded systems, when there can
# easily be "short recv", where it returns much less than requested
# data size. That's why this example is called "simplistic" - it
# shows that writing a web server in Python that *usually works* is
# ten lines of code, and you can use this technique for quick hacks
# and experimentation. But don't do it like that in production
# applications - instead, parse HTTP request properly, as shown
# by http_server.py example.
req = client_s.recv(4096)
print("Request:")
print(req)
client_s.send(CONTENT % counter)
client_s.close()
counter += 1
print()
main()