A simple, blazingly fast, selfhosted URL shortener with no unnecessary features; written in Rust.
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What is it?

A simple selfhosted URL shortener with no name because naming is hard

But why another URL shortener?

I've looked at a couple popular URL shorteners, however they either have unnecessary features, or they didn't have all the features I wanted.

Features

  • Shortens URLs of any length to a fixed length, randomly generated string
  • (Optional) Allows you to specify the shortened URL instead of the generated one (Missing in a surprising number of alternatives)
  • Opening the fixed length URL in your browser will instantly redirect you to the correct long URL (you'd think that's a standard feature, but apparently it's not)
  • Provides a simple API for adding new short links
  • Links are stored in an SQLite database
  • Available as a Docker container (there is no image on docker hub yet)
  • Backend written in Java using Spark Java, frontend written in plain HTML and vanilla JS, using Pure CSS for styling

Bloat that will not be implemented

  • Logging, tracking or spying of any kind. The only logs that still exist are errors printed to stderr and the default SLF4J warning
  • User management. If you need a shortener for your whole organisation, either run separate containers for everyone or use something else
  • Cookies, newsletters, "we value your privacy" popups or any of the multiple other ways modern web shows how anti-user it is. We all hate those and they're not needed here
  • Paywalls or messages beging for donations. If you want to support me (for whatever reason), you can message me through Github issues or via email github@draganczuk.tk

I might add one of those "fork me on github" thingies in the corner, though I doubt I will

Screenshot

Screenshot

Planned features for 1.0 (in order of importance

  • Better deduplication
  • Code cleanup
  • Official Docker Hub image

Usage

Clone this repository

git clone https://github.com/draganczukp/simply-shorten

Building from source

Gradle 6.x.x and JDK 11 are required. Other versions are not tested

1. Build the .jar file

gradle build --no-daemon

The --no-daemon option means that gradle should exit as soon as the build is finished. Without it, gradle would still be running in the background in order to speed up future builds.

2. Set environment variables

# Required for authentication
export username=<api username>
export password=<api password>
# Sets where the database exists. Can be local or remote (optional)
export db.url=<url> # Default: './urls.sqlite'

3. Run it

java -jar build/libs/url.jar

You can optionally set the port the server listens on by appending --port=[port]

Running with docker

docker run method

  1. Build the image
docker build . -t shorten:latest
  1. Run the image
docker run -p 4567:4567
    -d url:latest
    -e username="username"
    -e password="password"
    -d shorten:latest

2.a Make the database file available to host (optional)

touch ./urls.sqlite
docker run -p 4567:4567 \
    -e username="username" \
    -e password="password" \
    -v ./urls.sqlite:/urls.sqlite \
    -e db.url=/urls.sqlite \
    -d shorten:latest

docker-compose

There is a sample docker-compose.yml file in this repository configured for Traefik. You can use it as a base, modifying it as needed. Run it with

docker-compose up -d --build