A fast link-shortener with hardcoded optimizations, using Cloudflare Workers.
By design, only 1 user is allowed to write to the KV database. To ensure that
only the authorized user may write, set the BUTTERFLY_API_TOKEN
environment
variable with the following instructions:
- Create a file called
secret.json
at the root of the repository. - Define a json object and assign a password to the key. This is the token that you will need to provide to write to the KV database.
- Run
npx wrangler secret:bulk secret.json
to upload the secret to the worker.
For local development to have access to secrets, you need to define secrets in .dev.vars
like so:
BUTTERFLY_API_TOKEN = "mytoken"
This file needs to be manually updated to be kept in sync with secret.json
.
Client will receieve status 301 (permanent redirect) to the expanded URL. Hardcoded redirects also fall under this method, such as those for social media profiles.
This method requires a json body with the following shape:
{
"target": "www.example.com/url-to-shorten",
"token": "same_token_defined_as_secret"
}
and will generate a short url of the url given in target
. On success, the
response has the following shape:
{
"slug": "slug of short url",
"url": "full short url"
}
Currently, the cloudflare provider for terraform is unable to take multiple files as input. Since building this project generates both a shim.mjs
and an index.wasm
file,
terraform cannot deploy it yet.
Using wrangler we can deploy this project easily. See the Usage section below.
A template for kick starting a Cloudflare worker project using workers-rs
.
This template is designed for compiling Rust to WebAssembly and publishing the resulting worker to Cloudflare's edge infrastructure.
To create a my-project
directory using this template, run:
$ npm init cloudflare my-project worker-rust
# or
$ yarn create cloudflare my-project worker-rust
# or
$ pnpm create cloudflare my-project worker-rust
Note: Each command invokes
create-cloudflare
for project creation.
This template starts you off with a src/lib.rs
file, acting as an entrypoint for requests hitting your Worker. Feel free to add more code in this file, or create Rust modules anywhere else for this project to use.
With wrangler
, you can build, test, and deploy your Worker with the following commands:
# compiles your project to WebAssembly and will warn of any issues
$ npm run build
# run your Worker in an ideal development workflow (with a local server, file watcher & more)
$ npm run dev
# deploy your Worker globally to the Cloudflare network (update your wrangler.toml file for configuration)
$ npm run deploy
Read the latest worker
crate documentation here: https://docs.rs/worker
workers-rs
(the Rust SDK for Cloudflare Workers used in this template) is meant to be executed as compiled WebAssembly, and as such so must all the code you write and depend upon. All crates and modules used in Rust-based Workers projects have to compile to the wasm32-unknown-unknown
triple.
Read more about this on the workers-rs
project README.
If you have any problems with the worker
crate, please open an issue on the upstream project issue tracker on the workers-rs
repository.