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[[listeners]]
== Listeners

A listener is a set of processes that listens on a port for
new connections. Incoming connections get handled by Cowboy.
Depending on the connection handshake, one or another protocol
may be used.

This chapter is specific to Cowboy. Please refer to the
https://ninenines.eu/docs/en/ranch/1.3/guide/listeners/[Ranch User Guide]
for more information about listeners.

Cowboy provides two types of listeners: one listening for
clear TCP connections, and one listening for secure TLS
connections. Both of them support the HTTP/1.1 and HTTP/2
protocols.

=== Clear TCP listener

The clear TCP listener will accept connections on the
given port. A typical HTTP server would listen on port 80.
Port 80 requires special permissions on most platforms
however so a common alternative is port 8080.

The following snippet starts listening for connections
on port 8080:

[source,erlang]
----
start(_Type, _Args) ->
    Dispatch = cowboy_router:compile([
        {'_', [{"/", hello_handler, []}]}
    ]),
    {ok, _} = cowboy:start_clear(my_http_listener,
        [{port, 8080}],
        #{env => #{dispatch => Dispatch}}
    ),
    hello_erlang_sup:start_link().
----

The xref:getting_started[Getting Started] chapter uses a
clear TCP listener.

Clients connecting to Cowboy on the clear listener port are
expected to use either HTTP/1.1 or HTTP/2.

Cowboy supports both methods of initiating a clear
HTTP/2 connection: through the Upgrade mechanism
(https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc7540#section-3.2[RFC 7540 3.2])
or by sending the preface directly
(https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc7540#section-3.4[RFC 7540 3.4]).

Compatibility with HTTP/1.0 is provided by Cowboy's HTTP/1.1
implementation.

=== Secure TLS listener

The secure TLS listener will accept connections on the
given port. A typical HTTPS server would listen on port 443.
Port 443 requires special permissions on most platforms
however so a common alternative is port 8443.

// @todo Make a complete list of restrictions.

The function provided by Cowboy will ensure that the TLS
options given are following the HTTP/2 RFC with regards
to security. For example some TLS extensions or ciphers
may be disabled. This also applies to HTTP/1.1 connections
on this listener. If this is not desirable, Ranch can be
used directly to set up a custom listener.

[source,erlang]
----
start(_Type, _Args) ->
    Dispatch = cowboy_router:compile([
        {'_', [{"/", hello_handler, []}]}
    ]),
    {ok, _} = cowboy:start_tls(my_https_listener,
        [
            {port, 8443},
            {certfile, "/path/to/certfile"},
            {keyfile, "/path/to/keyfile"}
        ],
        #{env => #{dispatch => Dispatch}}
    ),
    hello_erlang_sup:start_link().
----

Clients connecting to Cowboy on the secure listener are
expected to use the ALPN TLS extension to indicate what
protocols they understand. Cowboy always prefers HTTP/2
over HTTP/1.1 when both are supported. When neither are
supported by the client, or when the ALPN extension was
missing, Cowboy expects HTTP/1.1 to be used.

Cowboy also advertises HTTP/2 support through the older
NPN TLS extension for compatibility. Note however that
this support will likely not be enabled by default when
Cowboy 2.0 gets released.

Compatibility with HTTP/1.0 is provided by Cowboy's HTTP/1.1
implementation.

=== Stopping the listener

When starting listeners along with the application it is
a good idea to also stop the listener when the application
stops. This can be done by calling `cowboy:stop_listener/1`
in the application's stop function:

[source,erlang]
----
stop(_State) ->
    ok = cowboy:stop_listener(my_http_listener).
----

=== Protocol configuration

The HTTP/1.1 and HTTP/2 protocols share the same semantics;
only their framing differs. The first is a text protocol and
the second a binary protocol.

Cowboy doesn't separate the configuration for HTTP/1.1 and
HTTP/2. Everything goes into the same map. Many options are
shared.

// @todo Describe good to know options for both protocols?
// Maybe do that in separate chapters?