hotel

Start apps from your browser and get local domains in seconds!
Tip: if you don't enable local domains, hotel can still be used as a catalog of local servers.
Hotel works great on any OS (OS X, Linux, Windows) and with all servers
- Node (Express, Webpack)
- PHP (Laravel, Symfony)
- Ruby (Rails, Sinatra, Jekyll)
- Python (Django)
- Docker
- Go
- Apache, Nginx
- ...
Support
You can support Hotel development on Patreon
Video
Features
- Local domains -
http://project.dev - HTTPS via self-signed certificate -
https://project.dev - Wildcard subdomains -
http://*.project.dev - Works everywhere - OS X, Linux and Windows
- Works with any server - Node, Ruby, PHP, ...
- Proxy - Map local domains to remote servers
- System-friendly - No messing with
port 80,/etc/hosts,sudoor additional software - Fallback URL -
http://localhost:2000/project - Servers are only started when you access them
- Plays nice with other servers (Apache, Nginx, ...)
- Random or fixed ports
Install
npm install -g hotel && hotel startHotel requires Node to be installed, if you don't have it, you can simply install it using one of the following method.
# https://brew.sh
brew install node
# https://github.com/creationix/nvm
nvm install stableYou can also visit https://nodejs.org.
Quick start
Local dev domains (optional)
To use local .dev domains, you need to configure your network or browser to use hotel's proxy auto-config file or you can skip this step for the moment and go directly to http://localhost:2000
Servers
Add your servers commands
~/projects/one$ hotel add nodemon
~/projects/two$ hotel add 'serve -p $PORT'Go to localhost:2000 or hotel.dev.
Alternatively you can directly go to
http://localhost:2000/one
http://localhost:2000/two
http://one.dev
http://two.dev
https://one.dev
https://two.dev
Tip you can also use hotel run <cmd> to start your server in the terminal and get a temporary local domain.
Popular servers examples
Using other servers? Here are some examples to get you started :)
hotel add 'ember server'
hotel add 'jekyll serve --port $PORT'
hotel add 'rails server -p $PORT -b 127.0.0.1'
hotel add 'python -m SimpleHTTPServer $PORT'
hotel add 'php -S 127.0.0.1:$PORT'
# ...On Windows use "%PORT%" instead of '$PORT'
Proxy
Add your remote servers
~$ hotel add http://foo.com --name bar
~$ hotel add http://192.168.1.12:1337 --name some-serverYou can now access them using
http://bar.dev # http://foo.com
http://some-server.dev # http://192.168.1.12:1337CLI usage and options
hotel add <cmd|url> [opts]
hotel run <cmd> [opts]
# Examples
hotel add 'nodemon app.js' --out dev.log # Set output file (default: none)
hotel add 'nodemon app.js' --name name # Set custom name (default: current dir name)
hotel add 'nodemon app.js' --port 3000 # Set a fixed port (default: random port)
hotel add 'nodemon app.js' --env PATH # Store PATH environment variable in server config
hotel add http://192.168.1.10 --name app # map local domain to URL
hotel run 'nodemon app.js' # Run server and get a temporary local domain
# Other commands
hotel ls # List servers
hotel rm # Remove server
hotel start # Start hotel daemon
hotel stop # Stop hotel daemonTo get help
hotel --help
hotel --help <cmd>Port
For hotel to work, your servers need to listen on the PORT environment variable.
Here are some examples showing how you can do it from your code or the command-line:
var port = process.env.PORT || 3000
server.listen(port)hotel add 'cmd -p $PORT' # OS X, Linux
hotel add "cmd -p %PORT%" # WindowsFallback URL
If you're offline or can't configure your browser to use .dev domains, you can always access your local servers by going to localhost:2000.
Configurations and logs
~/.hotel contains daemon logs, servers and daemon configurations.
~/.hotel/conf.json
~/.hotel/daemon.log
~/.hotel/daemon.pid
~/.hotel/servers/<app-name>.jsonThird-party tools
- Hotel Clerk OS X menubar
- HotelX Another OS X menubar (only 1.6MB)
- alfred-hotel Alfred 3 workflow
FAQ
Seting a fixed port
hotel add --port 3000 'server-cmd $PORT' Adding X-Forwarded-* headers to requests
hotel add --xfwd 'server-cmd'Setting HTTP_PROXY env
Use --http-proxy-env flag when adding your server or edit your server configuration in ~/.hotel/servers
hotel add --http-proxy-env 'server-cmd'Proxying requests to a remote https server
hotel add --change-origin 'https://jsonplaceholder.typicode.com'When proxying to a https server, you may get an error because your local .dev domain doesn't match the host defined in the server certificate. With this flag, host header is changed to match the target URL.
ENOSPC and EACCES errors
If you're seeing one of these errors in ~/.hotel/daemon.log, this usually means that there's some permissions issues. hotel daemon should be started without sudo and ~/.hotel should belong to $USER.
# to fix permissions
sudo chown -R $USER: $HOME/.hotelSee also, https://docs.npmjs.com/getting-started/fixing-npm-permissions
License
MIT - Typicode
