To run it in Docker, you need to build an image of it.
```bash
docker build -t breeze .
```
From there, you can make a `docker-compose.yaml` file with your configuration and run it using `docker-compose up`.
It can also be installed directly if you have the Rust toolchain installed
```bash
cargo install --path .
```
## Usage
### Hosting
Configuration is read through environment variables, because I wanted to run this using `docker-compose`.
```
BRZ_BASE_URL - base url for upload urls (ex: http://127.0.0.1:8000 for http://127.0.0.1:8000/p/abcdef.png, http://picture.wtf for http://picture.wtf/p/abcdef.png)
BRZ_SAVE_PATH - this should be a path where uploads are saved to disk (ex: /srv/uploads, C:\brzuploads)
BRZ_UPLOAD_KEY (optional) - if not empty, the key you specify will be required to upload new files.
BRZ_CACHE_UPL_MAX_LENGTH - this is the max length an upload can be in bytes before it won't be cached (ex: 80000000 for 80MB)
BRZ_CACHE_UPL_LIFETIME - this indicates how long an upload will stay in cache (ex: 1800 for 30 minutes, 60 for 1 minute)
BRZ_CACHE_SCAN_FREQ - this is the frequency of full cache scans, which scan for and remove expired uploads (ex: 60 for 1 minute)
BRZ_CACHE_MEM_CAPACITY - this is the amount of memory the cache will hold before dropping entries
```
### Uploading
The HTTP API is fairly simple, and it's pretty easy to make a ShareX configuration for it.
Uploads should be sent to `/new?name={original filename}` as a POST request. If the server uses upload keys, it should be sent to `/new?name={original filename}&key={upload key}`. The uploaded file's content should be sent as raw binary in the request body.
Here's an example ShareX configuration for it (with a key):