# Haste Haste is an open-source pastebin software written in node.js, which is easily installable in any network. It can be backed by either redis or filesystem, and has a very easy adapter interface for other stores. A publicly available version can be found at [hastebin.com](http://hastebin.com) Major design objectives: * Be really pretty * Be really simple * Be easy to set up and use Haste works really well with a little utility called [haste-client](https://github.com/seejohnrun/haste-client), allowing you to do things like: `cat something | haste` which will output a URL to share containing the contents of `cat something`'s STDOUT. Check the README there for more details and usages. ## Tested Browsers * Firefox 8 * Chrome 17 * Safari 5.3 ## Installation 1. Download the package, and expand it 2. Explore the settings inside of `config.js.example` and save it as `config.js`, but the defaults should be good 3. `npm install` 4. `npm start` ## Settings * `host` - the host the server runs on (default localhost) * `port` - the port the server runs on (default 7777) * `keyLength` - the length of the keys to user (default 10) * `maxLength` - maximum length of a paste (default none) * `staticMaxAge` - max age for static assets (86400) * `recompressStaticAssets` - whether or not to compile static js assets (true) * `documents` - static documents to serve (ex: http://hastebin.com/about.com) in addition to static assets. These will never expire. * `storage` - storage options (see below) * `logging` - logging preferences * `keyGenerator` - key generator options (see below) * `rateLimits` - settings for rate limiting (see below) ## Rate Limiting When present, the `rateLimits` option enables built-in rate limiting courtesy of `connect-ratelimit`. Any of the options supported by that library can be used and set in `config.json`. See the README for [connect-ratelimit](https://github.com/dharmafly/connect-ratelimit) for more information! ## Key Generation ### Phonetic Attempts to generate phonetic keys, similar to `pwgen` ``` json { "type": "phonetic" } ``` ### Random Generates a random key ``` json { "type": "random", "keyspace": "abcdef" } ``` The _optional_ keySpace argument is a string of acceptable characters for the key. ## Storage ### File To use file storage (the default) change the storage section in `config.js` to something like: ``` json { "path": "./data", "type": "file" } ``` Where `path` represents where you want the files stored ### Redis To use redis storage you must install the `redis` package in npm, and have `redis-server` running on the machine. `npm install redis` Once you've done that, your config section should look like: ``` json { "type": "redis", "host": "localhost", "port": 6379, "db": 2 } ``` You can also set an `expire` option to the number of seconds to expire keys in. This is off by default, but will constantly kick back expirations on each view or post. All of which are optional except `type` with very logical default values. If your Redis server is configured for password authentification, use the `password` field. ### Postgres To use postgres storage you must install the `pg` package in npm `npm install pg` Once you've done that, your config section should look like: ``` json { "type": "postgres", "connectionUrl": "postgres://user:password@host:5432/database" } ``` You can also just set the environment variable for `DATABASE_URL` to your database connection url. You will have to manually add a table to your postgres database: `create table entries (id serial primary key, key varchar(255) not null, value text not null, expiration int, unique(key));` You can also set an `expire` option to the number of seconds to expire keys in. This is off by default, but will constantly kick back expirations on each view or post. All of which are optional except `type` with very logical default values. ### Memcached To use memcached storage you must install the `memcache` package via npm `npm install memcache` Once you've done that, your config section should look like: ``` json { "type": "memcached", "host": "127.0.0.1", "port": 11211 } ``` You can also set an `expire` option to the number of seconds to expire keys in. This behaves just like the redis expirations, but does not push expirations forward on GETs. All of which are optional except `type` with very logical default values. ## Author John Crepezzi ## License (The MIT License) Copyright © 2011-2012 John Crepezzi Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the ‘Software’), to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions: The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software. THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED ‘AS IS’, WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE ### Other components: * jQuery: MIT/GPL license * highlight.js: Copyright © 2006, Ivan Sagalaev * highlightjs-coffeescript: WTFPL - Copyright © 2011, Dmytrii Nagirniak