Actually Portable Python is now outperforming the Python binaries
that come bundled with Linux distros, at things like HTTP serving.
You can now have a fully featured Python install in just one .com
file that runs on six operating systems and is about 10mb in size.
With tuning, the tiniest is ~1mb. We've got most of the libraries
working, including pysqlite, and the repl now feels very pleasant.
The things you can't do quite yet are: threads and shared objects
but that can happen in the future, if the community falls in love
with this project and wants to see it developed further. Changes:
- Add siginterrupt()
- Add sqlite3 to Python
- Add issymlink() helper
- Make GetZipCdir() faster
- Add tgamma() and finite()
- Add legacy function lutimes()
- Add readlink() and realpath()
- Use heap allocations when appropriate
- Reorganize Python into two-stage build
- Save Lua / Python shell history to dotfile
- Integrate Python Lib embedding into linkage
- Make isregularfile() and isdirectory() go faster
- Make Python shell auto-completion work perfectly
- Make crash reports work better if changed directory
- Fix Python+NT open() / access() flag overflow error
- Disable Python tests relating to \N{LONG NAME} syntax
- Have Python REPL copyright() show all notice embeddings
The biggest technical challenge at the moment is working around
when Python tries to be too clever about filenames.
- Use nullness checks when calling weakly linked functions.
- Avoid typedef for reasons described in Linux Kernel style guide.
- Avoid enum in in Windows headers. Earlier in Cosmo's history all one
hundred files in libc/nt/enum/ used to be enums and it resulted in
gigabytes of DWARF data almost as large as everything else in the
codebase combined.
- Bitfields aren't our friends. They have frequent ABI breakages,
inconsistent arithmetic across compilers, and different endianness
between cpus. Compiler authors also haven't invested much roi into
making bit fields go fast so they produce poor assembly.
- Use memccpy() instead of strncpy() or snprintf() for length-bounded
copying of C strings. strncpy() is a misunderstood function and
snprintf() is awesome but memccpy() deserves more love.
Your redbean can now interoperate with clients that require TLS crypto.
This is accomplished using a protocol polyglot that lets us distinguish
between HTTP and HTTPS regardless of the port number. Certificates will
be generated automatically, if none are supplied by the user. Footprint
increases by only a few hundred kb so redbean in MODY=tiny is now 1.0mb
- Add lseek() polyfills for ZIP executable
- Automatically polyfill /tmp/FOO paths on NT
- Fix readdir() / ftw() / nftw() bugs on Windows
- Introduce -B flag for slower SSL that's stronger
- Remove mbedtls features Cosmopolitan doesn't need
- Have base64 decoder support the uri-safe alternative
- Remove Truncated HMAC because it's forbidden by the IETF
- Add all the mbedtls test suites and make them go 3x faster
- Support opendir() / readdir() / closedir() on ZIP executable
- Use Everest for ECDHE-ECDSA because it's so good it's so good
- Add tinier implementation of sha1 since it's not worth the rom
- Add chi-square monte-carlo mean correlation tests for getrandom()
- Source entropy on Windows from the proper interface everyone uses
We're continuing to outperform NGINX and other servers on raw message
throughput. Using SSL means that instead of 1,000,000 qps you can get
around 300,000 qps. However redbean isn't as fast as NGINX yet at SSL
handshakes, since redbean can do 2,627 per second and NGINX does 4.3k
Right now, the SSL UX story works best if you give your redbean a key
signing key since that can be easily generated by openssl using a one
liner then redbean will do all the things that are impossibly hard to
do like signing ecdsa and rsa certificates that'll work in chrome. We
should integrate the let's encrypt acme protocol in the future.
Live Demo: https://redbean.justine.lol/
Root Cert: https://redbean.justine.lol/redbean1.crt
This change configures Mbed TLS to support the fewest number of things
possible required to run an HTTPS server that caters to the sweet spot
of being legacy enough to support the vast majority of user agents but
modern enough that Chrome and Firefox remain happy. That should entail
- TLS_ECDHE_RSA_WITH_AES_128_GCM_SHA256
- TLS_RSA_WITH_AES_128_CBC_SHA
Even though other suites still get included so what usually happens in
practice is ECDHE-RSA-AES256-GCM-SHA384 under TLS 1.2 will be selected
and the binary footprint is reasonable, and should cost us about 200kb
This change gets redbean SQLite working in write mode on Windows.
Warnings have been added to the appropriate and responsible places.
Hacking proprietary PC systems into production-worthy servers isn't
terribly high on the list of priorities. Consider BSD or Linux when
building online systems that service requests from multiple people.
Fixes#193
redbean lua handlers that perform sql queries can do 400k qps.
We now use a separate compile-time options for SQLite, when building the
SQLite shell versus building the production web serving code. It doesn't
seem appropriate for something like redbean to include backups, progress
callbacks, query completion, profiling, EXPLAIN, ALTER, ANALYZE, VACUUM,
etc. since those tasks are better left to the sqlite3.com shell program.
Lua SQLite pointer APIs have been removed since we're not using threads.
The Lua APIs for installing update / commit / rollback hooks are removed
due to a general sense of disagreement and an overall lack of comfort.
Full-Text Search and R*Tree are as large as the rest of SQLite combined.
Turning those off keeps redbean under 1mb when built for MODE=tiny which
is nice for marketing purposes.
If you need something that was removed, file an issue, and we'll add it.
- Now integrated with `make tags` for Emacs IDE features
- Delete some old deprecated broken full-text search engines
- Rename .h → .inc files that don't meet our definition of header
- Make sure every #include line is normal form so tools understand
See #162