# gmid > dead simple, zero configuration Gemini server gmid is a simple and minimal Gemini server. It requires no configuration whatsoever so it's well suited for local development machines. Care has been taken to assure that gmid doesn't serve files outside the given directory, and it won't follow symlinks. Furthermore, on OpenBSD, gmid is also `pledge(2)`ed and `unveil(2)`ed: the set of pledges are `stdio rpath inet`, with the addition of `proc exec` if CGI scripts are enabled, while the given directory is unveiled with `rx`. ## Features - IRI support (RFC RFC3987) - dual stack: can serve over both IPv4 and IPv6 - CGI scripts - (very) low memory footprint - small codebase, easily hackable ## Planned features - virtual hosts ## Drawbacks - not suited for very busy hosts. If you receive an high number of connection per-second you'd probably want to run multiple gmid instances behind relayd/haproxy or a different server. ## Building gmid depends a POSIX libc and libtls. It can probably be linked against libretls, but I've never tried. See [INSTALL.gmi](INSTALL.gmi) for more info, but the build is as simple as make The Makefile isn't able to produce a statically linked executable (yet), so for that you have to execute by hand make cc -static *.o /usr/lib/lib{crypto,tls,ssl}.a -o gmid strip gmid to enjoy your ~2.3M statically-linked gmid.