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QtWebServer

QtWebServer is an attempt to create a high-performance Qt based web application server, ie. a web server that runs native C++/Qt code in order to deliver websites.

A perfect use-case would be providing a REST API for smaller services.

Concept

Within the Qt app, you set up resources and bind them to physical providers, for example files or a database content. A web application object holds information on how to match uri patterns to resources, which again is accessed by a multithreaded tcp server component. The multithreaded server is an extension of Qt's QTcpServer class.

Installation and usage

#include <QCoreApplication>
#include <QFile>

#include "tcp/tcpmultithreadedserver.h"
#include "http/httpwebengine.h"
#include "http/httpiodeviceresource.h"

using namespace QtWebServer;

int main(int argc, char *argv[])
{
    QCoreApplication a(argc, argv);

    Tcp::MultithreadedServer s;
    Http::WebEngine w;

    w.addResource(new Http::IODeviceResource(
                      "/test",
                      new QFile("/home/jacob/text.html")));

    s.setResponder(&w);
    s.listen(QHostAddress::Any, 3000);
    return a.exec();
}

You can either integrate QtWebServer into your existing application or build a whole standalone web application. There is no distinction between the webserver and the web application, you literally link your web application with your website.

Installation via qt-pods is perfectly suited for this use-case. You can update your QtWebServer version at any time and switch back flawlessly, since it will be embedded as a git submodule. It is not recommended to plain copy the QtWebServer code into your target application. In order to learn more about qt-pods, see here:

https://github.com/cybercatalyst/qt-pods

License

Licensed under GNU AGPLv3. Available under a commercial license, too.

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