copher is a desktop GUI gopher client powered by carlo.
Note: Chrome or Chromium must be installed.
Install with npm:
$ npm i -g copher
Then run, optionally passing in a gopher URL (defaults to
gopher://gopher.floodgap.com
):
$ copher [url]
Alternatively, use npx:
$ npx copher [url]
To navigate, click on the blue links on the left. You can go back and forward by
using the left and right arrow keys. You can select a new URL to navigate to by
pressing the g
key.
HTML/web links and Telnet links will open in the system default applications. Images, sound and text files will open as a new page in copher. All other file types are downloaded to disk using Chrome's downloader.
By default, connections will time out after 1 second. You can configure the
timeout, in milliseconds, by setting the --timeout
option.
An effort is made to support all of RFC 1436, except for CSO (item type
2
).
The following commonly used item-type extensions are supported:
i
- Non-link text appearing in a Gopher menu.p
- Specifically represents PNG images. These are rendered as other images are.h
- Items of this type whose selector is of the formURL:http://example.com/foo.html
will open in the default browser.s
- Sound files are opened in Copher with audio player controls.d
- Downloadable files.P
- PDF files. These are downloaded like other downloadable files.
If copher does not recognize an item type, it will be treated as a downloadable file.
While RFC 1436 states that all text must be ASCII or Latin1, UTF-8 appears
to be more prevalant on Gopher servers today, so Copher will interpret text as
UTF-8 by default. This can be changed via the --encoding
option.
iconv-lite
is used to convert from various encodings to UTF-8 for
rendering. For example, to parse all incoming text as Latin1, try:
$ copher --encoding latin1
Copher supports Copher-over-TLS, in that it will first try to initiate a TLS
handshake with the destination server, and if that fails, fall back to ordinary
plaintext TCP. Since most gopher servers don't support TLS, this feature must be
activated with a --tls
option. All port numbers in copher are evaluated as
port % 100000
, so S/Gopher links should work just fine when the --tls
option is enabled.
Gopher-over-HTTPS is supported by passing a URL template to the --goh
option. The template must contain a variable named url
and the protocol must
be https:
. Technically HTTP would also work fine, but it is called
Gopher-over-HTTPS, after all!
Example:
$ copher --goh https://goh.commons.host:7070/{?url} gopher://gopher.club
When this is enabled, all traffic will be tunneled over HTTPS through the server at the URL provided, assuming that the HTTPS server is GoH compliant.
Note that when this is enabled, S/Gopher will not work correctly.
You can provide a --userjs
option, passing in an absolute path to a JS file.
This file will be inserted inline in a <script>
tag. There's no extra API
provided, but you can use this to change styles or trigger or handle events, or
any number of UI-changing things. The current version of copher is provided as
window.copherVersion
, in order to deal with any version-to-version
differences.
WARNING: Do not blindly accept scripts from other random folks on the internet to include in your
--userjs
file. While Copher runs inside Chromium and in its own Chrome profile, there's no telling what other damage a script may do. Be diligent and review every line of code you add.
There is a bug that causes a "back" (via left arrow key) to navigate from the
initial page to a blank page lacking the ability to move forward again. This is
fixed by using Chrome Canary. You can specify which Chrome binary to use by
setting the CHROME_PATH
environment variable.
The MIT License. See LICENSE.txt.