Patch updates text areas and links to reflect the Liberty release across all guides except the install guide. Certain old notes relating to unsupported releases were also removed. Change-Id: I65f6e3747266db5b56e766d389376fb928d881c8
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Create static website
To discover whether your Object Storage system supports this feature,
see discoverability
.
Alternatively, check with your service provider.
You can use your Object Storage account to create a static website.
This static website is created with Static Web middleware and serves
container data with a specified index file, error file resolution, and
optional file listings. This mode is normally active only for anonymous
requests, which provide no authentication token. To use it with
authenticated requests, set the header X-Web-Mode
to
TRUE
on the request.
The Static Web filter must be added to the pipeline in your
/etc/swift/proxy-server.conf
file below any authentication
middleware. You must also add a Static Web middleware configuration
section.
See the Cloud Administrator Guide for an example of the static web configuration syntax.
See the Cloud Administrator Guide for a complete example of the /etc/swift/proxy-server.conf file (including static web).
Your publicly readable containers are checked for two headers,
X-Container-Meta-Web-Index
and
X-Container-Meta-Web-Error
. The
X-Container-Meta-Web-Error
header is discussed below, in
the section called set_error_static_website
.
Use X-Container-Meta-Web-Index
to determine the index
file (or default page served, such as index.html
) for your
website. When someone initially enters your site, the
index.html
file displays automatically. If you create
sub-directories for your site by creating pseudo-directories in your
container, the index page for each sub-directory is displayed by
default. If your pseudo-directory does not have a file with the same
name as your index file, visits to the sub-directory return a 404
error.
You also have the option of displaying a list of files in your
pseudo-directory instead of a web page. To do this, set the
X-Container-Meta-Web-Listings
header to TRUE
.
You may add styles to your file listing by setting
X-Container-Meta-Web-Listings-CSS
to a style sheet (for
example, lists.css
).
Static Web middleware through Object Storage
The following sections show how to use Static Web middleware through Object Storage.
Make container publicly readable
Make the container publicly readable. Once the container is publicly readable, you can access your objects directly, but you must set the index file to browse the main site URL and its sub-directories.
$ swift post -r '.r:*' container
Set site index file
Set the index file. In this case, index.html
is the
default file displayed when the site appears.
$ swift post -m 'web-index:index.html' container
Enable file listing
Turn on file listing. If you do not set the index file, the URL displays a list of the objects in the container. Instructions on styling the list with a CSS follow.
$ swift post -m 'web-listings: true' container
Enable CSS for file listing
Style the file listing using a CSS.
$ swift post -m 'web-listings-css:listings.css' container
Set error pages for static website
You can create and set custom error pages for visitors to your
website; currently, only 401 (Unauthorized) and 404 (Not Found) errors
are supported. To do this, set the metadata header,
X-Container-Meta-Web-Error
.
Error pages are served with the status code pre-pended to the name of
the error page you set. For instance, if you set
X-Container-Meta-Web-Error
to error.html
, 401
errors will display the page 401error.html
. Similarly, 404
errors will display 404error.html
. You must have both of
these pages created in your container when you set the
X-Container-Meta-Web-Error
metadata, or your site will
display generic error pages.
You only have to set the X-Container-Meta-Web-Error
metadata once for your entire static website.
Set error pages for static website request
$ swift post -m 'web-error:error.html' container
Any 2nn
response indicates success.