/webdav

Simple Go WebDAV server.

Primary LanguageGoMIT LicenseMIT

webdav

Build Go Report Card Version

Install

Please refer to the Releases page for more information. There, you can either download the binaries or find the Docker commands to install WebDAV.

Usage

webdav command line interface is really easy to use so you can easily create a WebDAV server for your own user. By default, it runs on a random free port and supports JSON, YAML and TOML configuration. An example of a YAML configuration with the default configurations:

# Server related settings
address: 0.0.0.0
port: 0
auth: true
tls: false
cert: cert.pem
key: key.pem

# Default user settings (will be merged)
scope: .
modify: true
rules: []

# CORS configuration
cors:
  enabled: true
  credentials: true
  allowed_headers:
    - Depth
  allowed_hosts:
    - http://localhost:8080
  allowed_methods:
    - GET
  exposed_headers:
    - Content-Length
    - Content-Range

users:
  - username: admin
    password: admin
    scope: /a/different/path
  - username: encrypted
    password: "{bcrypt}$2y$10$zEP6oofmXFeHaeMfBNLnP.DO8m.H.Mwhd24/TOX2MWLxAExXi4qgi"
  - username: "{env}ENV_USERNAME"
    password: "{env}ENV_PASSWORD"
  - username: basic
    password: basic
    modify:   false
    rules:
      - regex: false
        allow: false
        path: /some/file

There are more ways to customize how you run WebDAV through flags and environment variables. Please run webdav --help for more information on that.

Systemd

An example of how to use this with systemd is on webdav.service.example.

CORS

The allowed_* properties are optional, the default value for each of them will be *. exposed_headers is optional as well, but is not set if not defined. Setting credentials to true will allow you to:

  1. Use withCredentials = true in javascript.
  2. Use the username:password@host syntax.

License

MIT © Henrique Dias