Stubby makes your development environment act more like your production environment.
A local server suite with a declarative project-specific configuration that helps the project see the host environment just as it would see production if it were running there.
Centralized configuration systems instruct your application how to function on the host environment. Stubby prefers that your application ask the environment to mold itself to the needs of the application.
Consider your app is a manager sent to Germany to lead an automotive operation. The manager has a language dictionary and translates each order to German before giving it to the team. Consider the following interaction:
"Where's the screwdriver?"
"Wo ist der Schraubenzieher?"
=>
"Im roten Feld über die Straße"
"In the red box down the street"
# Get screwdriver from red box,
# screw bolt into metal
This is what we tell our applications to do when we use a centralized configuration:
"Where's the database?"
ENV["DATABASE_URI"]
"mysql://blah/"
# Connect to database
# Execute query
Stubby is a translator in this instance. Since Stubby knows that you need a screwdriver, and it knows where you look for it, Stubby will make sure that the screwdriver your manager needs is where your manager expects it to be.
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manage your .dev domains (or any random old TLD)
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stub APIs so you can run tests locally
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get your team on the right system with the proper hosts settings.
The Stubfile.json format and the extension / adapter organization is clear and complete enough to handle the majority of use cases. No major changes to the general system or configuration formats.
Install the stubby gem:
> $ sudo gem install stubby
> $ sudo stubby -h
> Commands:
> stubby env NAME # Switch stubby environment
> stubby halt # Shut down if running, restore if not
> stubby help [COMMAND] # Describe available commands or one specific command
> stubby restore # Restore defaults
> stubby start ENVIRONMENT # Starts stubby HTTP and DNS servers
> stubby status # View current rules
> stubby stop # Stops a running stubby process
Stubby uses Stubfile.json
for configuration. This file includes a mapping of
environments to a number of rules that define server configurations and stub
usage for the project.
> cd ~/MyProject
> cat Stubfile.json
> {
> "test": {
> "dependencies": {
> "https://github.com/jkassemi/example-stubby.git": "staging"
> },
>
> "example.com": "localhost:3000"
> },
>
> "staging": {
> "dependencies": {
> "https://github.com/jkassemi/example-stubby.git": "staging"
> },
>
> "example.com": "dns-cname://aws..."
> }
> }
> $ sudo stubby start
The 'test' and 'staging' modes for this project both include rules for the
'example' stub, and then define a single rule of their own. Stubby starts
by default in the 'development' environment, so with this Stubfile.json
,
the stubby server is not yet modifying any requests. In a new terminal:
> $ sudo stubby env test
Switches stubby to test mode. Now the 'example' stub is activated, and additionally any requests to http or https versions of example.com are routed to http://localhost:3000. Let's take a look at the rules applied:
> $ sudo bin/stubby status
> {
> "rules":{
> "https://github.com/jkassemi/example-stubby.git":{
> "dns://admin.example.com/a":"dns-a://172.16.123.1",
> "http://admin.example.com":"http-redirect://blank?to=https://admin.example.com&code=302",
> "https://admin.example.com":"http-proxy://10.0.1.1",
> "dns://admin2.example.com/a":"dns-cname://admin.example.com",
> "http://(.*)\\.?example.com":"http-proxy://10.0.1.1",
> "dns://(.*)\\.?example.com/a":"dns-a://172.16.123.1",
> "https://g?mail.*/.*":"http-proxy://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RTFM",
> "dns://g?mail.*/.*/a":"dns-a://172.16.123.1",
> "http://yahoo.com":"http-redirect://duckduckgo.com",
> "dns://yahoo.com/a":"dns-a://172.16.123.1",
> "https://yahoo.com":"https-redirect://duckduckgo.com",
> "dns://.*\\.stubby.dev/a":"dns-a://172.16.123.1",
> "http://.*\\.stubby.dev":"file:///var/www/tmp",
> "https://.*\\.stubby.dev":"file:///var/www/tmp",
> "dns://api.example.com/a":"dns-a://172.16.123.1",
> "http://api.example.com":"file://~/.stubby/example/files",
> "https://api.example.com":"file://~/.stubby/example/files",
> "dns://.*/mx":"dns-mx://172.16.123.1/?priority=10"
> },
> "_":{
> "dependencies":{
> "https://github.com/jkassemi/example-stubby.git":"staging"
> },
> "dns://secured.atpay.com/a":"dns-a://172.16.123.1",
> "http://secured.atpay.com":"http-redirect://blank?to=https://secured.atpay.com&code=302",
> "https://secured.atpay.com":"http-proxy://localhost:3000",
> "dns://api.atpay.com/a":"dns-a://172.16.123.1",
> "http://api.atpay.com":"http-redirect://blank?to=https://api.atpay.com&code=302",
> "https://api.atpay.com":"http-proxy://localhost:4000",
> "dns://.*/mx":"dns-mx://172.16.123.1/?priority=10"
> },
> "_smtp":{
> "dns://outbox.stubby.dev/a":"dns-a://172.16.123.1",
> "http://outbox.stubby.dev":"http-proxy://172.16.123.1:9001"
> }
> },
> "environment":"development"
> }
This shows us all activated rules. the "_" indicates that the rules are loaded
from the current Stubfile.json
, while "example" indicates that the rules are
loaded from an installed stub, "example".
To revert the system back to normal, just CTRL-C from the main stubby process. This will revert any changes made to configure DNS servers for all network interfaces and will shut down the stubby server.
To contribute a stub, just add your stub to the list above and issue a pull request. There is no automated central index.
It may be useful to deny requests that aren't routed by a system using stubby, or for a site accessed with stubby to display some information about the environment requested.
The HTTP and HTTPS extensions both append request headers to proxied requests. A STUBBY_ENV header contains the name of the stubby environment.
Additionally, stubby requests send a STUBBY_KEY header which contains a hash that should be unique over the stubby user and the instruction that the trigger executed. If you configure your application to track STUBBY_KEY values, you can whitelist requests to a stubby system.
A stub is a folder named with the name of the stub that contains a stubby.json file. The stubby.json file contains a hash with the available modes. Each mode contains a set of rules that define how to route DNS and how to handle potential extension requests (redirects, file server, etc).
Installed stubs are in the ~/.stubby folder:
> $ ls ~/.stubby/jkassemi
> stubby-example
The example folder is the example
stub, and the system.json file contains the agent configurations. You don't need to manually edit it.
> $ find ~/.stubby/jkassemi/example
> ... jkassemi/example
> ... jkassemi/example/files
> ... jkassemi/example/hello.html
> ... jkassemi/example/stubby.json
The example/stubby.json file has two modes, staging, and production:
> cat ~/.stubby/jkassemi/example-stubby/stubby.json
{ "staging": {...}, "production": {...} }
Each environment contains a number of rules:
{ "staging": {
"[PROTOCOL://]MATCH_REGEXP": "INSTRUCTION"
} ... }
When a request is made, either DNS or HTTP (important), the request is compared against the PROTOCOL and MATCH_REGEXP (together these are called the TRIGGER). If matched, INSTRUCTION is executed. Excluding a protocol from the trigger causes Stubby to presuppose a few things about your request. It'll handle DNS, HTTP and HTTPS for definitions like this.
"test.example.com": "http://10.0.1.5"
Expands to:
"dns://test.example.com/a": "dns-a://10.0.1.5",
"http://test.example.com": "http-redirect://blank?to=https://test.example.com&code=302",
"https://test.example.com": "http-proxy://10.0.1.5
Don't want to default over to https? You can be more explicit:
"http://test.example.com": "http://10.0.1.5"
Which expands to:
"dns://test.example.com/a": "dns-a://10.0.1.5",
"http://test.example.com": "http-proxy://10.0.1.5"
> $ dig test.example.com
...
;; ANSWER SECTION:
test.example.com. 0 IN A 172.16.123.1
172.16.123.1 is the stubby interface (TODO: configurable). All requests to http://test.example.com are routed to the stubby web server at that address.
> $ curl test.example.com
Issues a request handled by the stubby web server, which proxies the request to 172.16.123.1.
To simply override DNS for test.example.com, you can create an A record on lookup:
"dns://test.example.com": "dns-a://10.0.1.5"
For a CNAME:
"dns://test.example.com": "dns-cname://test.example2.com"
Using the dns-#{name} convention, you can create simple references to any dns record type.
Because stubby can intercept HTTP requests, it includes a base set of functionality that allows you two serve files directly from the stub. Given a rule:
"api.example.com": "file://~/.stubby/example/files"
DNS will resolve to the stubby server:
> $ dig api.example.com
...
api.example.com. 0 IN A 172.16.123.1
And a web request to api.example.com will serve files from the ~/.stubby/example/files directory:
> $ curl http://api.example.com/hello.html
> <html><head></head><body>Hello</body></html>
This is designed to allow you to create API stubs (success responses, for instance).
Given a rule:
"http://yahoo.com": "http-redirect://blank?to=duckduckgo.com"
DNS will resolve to the stubby server, and the web request to http://yahoo.com will redirect to http://duckduckgo.com.
Stubby includes an SMTP extension to capture outgoing messages. Specify the domain to capture mail from and forward to smtp://
"smtp://.*\.example\.com": "about://blank"
will ensure any message sent by your system directly (this does not include messages sent from yahoo or gmail) will be captured by Stubby. Visit http://outbox.stubby.dev to see the captured messages.
Mail capture is currently provided by the "MailCatcher" gem.
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general traffic monitoring proxy traffic on ports and send to log systems: ":25": "smtp://" ":3306": "mysql://"
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web app front-end: show emails sent, mysql queries made, etc.
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github installation with no index.json
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P2P connections allow access to dev systems running stubby (agent mode?)
"example.com" => "localhost:3000" "tunnel://example.com": "tunnel://jkassemi@stubby.site"
=>
On host system:
"example.com" => "localhost:3000"
On guest system:
"dns://example.com/." => @ "http://example.com" => "tunnel://jkassemi@stubby.site/?to=http://example.com" "https://example.com" => "tunnel://jkassemi@stubby.site/?to=http://example.com" "smtp://." => "tunnel://jkassemi@stubby.site/?to=smtp://$1"
guest opens a connection to stubby.site, requesting last broadcast of NAT address for host. guest attempts udp tunnel with host