+<p><code>{"status": "success"}</code>
+
+<p>For the CGI backend, you may get a 500 error if something goes wrong.
+For the HTTP backend, you'll get nothing (since it will have crashed),
+or maybe a 502 Bad Gateway if you have it behind another web server.
+
+<p>All usernames must be 32 characters or less. Usernames must contain
+only the ASCII characters 0-9, A-Z, a-z, underscore (_), and hyphen (-).
+Passwords can be at most 64 bytes, and have no limits on characters (but
+beware: if you have a null in the middle, it will stop checking there
+because I use <code>strncmp(3)</code> to compare).
+
+<p>Tags must be 64 characters or less, and can contain only the ASCII
+characters 0-9, A-Z, a-z, underscore (_), and hyphen (-).
+
+<h3><a name="api_create">/create</a> - create a new user</a></h3>
+
+<p>To create a user, POST to /create with <code>username</code> and
+<code>password</code> parameters for the new user. The server will
+respond with JSON failure if the user exists, or if the user can't be
+created for some other reason. The server will respond with JSON
+success if the user is created.
+
+<h3><a name="api_login">/login</a> - log in</a></h3>
+
+<p>POST to /login with the <code>username</code> and
+<code>password</code> parameters for an existing user. The server will
+respond with JSON failure if the user does not exist or if the password
+is incorrect. On success, the server will respond with JSON success,
+and will set a cookie named 'auth' that must be sent by the client when
+accessing restricted API functions (/put and /logout).
+
+<h3><a name="api_logout">/logout</a> - log out</a></h3>
+
+<p>POST to /logout with with <code>username</code>, the user to log out,
+along with the auth cookie in a Cookie header. The server will respond
+with JSON failure if the user does not exist or if the auth cookie is
+bad. The server will respond with JSON success after the user is
+successfully logged out.
+
+<h3><a name="api_put">/put</a> - add a new record</a></h3>
+
+<p>POST to /put with <code>username</code> and <code>data</code>
+parameters, and an auth cookie. The server will respond with JSON
+failure if the auth cookie is bad, if the user doesn't exist, or if
+<code>data</code> contains more than 65535 bytes <i>after</i> URL
+decoding. The server will respond with JSON success after the record is
+successfully added.
+
+<h3><a name="api_get">/get/(user), /get/(user)/(start record)-(end record)</a> - get records for a user</a></h3>
+
+<p>A GET request to /get/(user), where (user) is the user desired, will
+return the last 50 records for that user in a list of objects. The
+record objects look like this:
+
+<pre>
+{
+ "record":"0",
+ "timestamp":1294309438,
+ "data":"eatin a taco on fifth street"
+}
+</pre>
+
+<p><code>record</code> is the record number, <code>timestamp</code> is
+the UNIX epoch timestamp (i.e., the number of seconds since Jan 1 1970
+00:00:00 GMT), and <code>data</code> is the content of the record. The
+record number is sent as a string because while Blërg supports record
+numbers up to 2<sup>64</sup> - 1, Javascript uses floating point for all
+its numbers, and can only support integers without truncation up to
+2<sup>53</sup>. This difference is largely academic, but I didn't want
+this problem to sneak up on anyone who is more insane than I am. :]
+
+<p>The second form, /get/(user)/(start record)-(end record), retrieves a
+specific range of records, from (start record) to (end record)
+inclusive. You can retrieve at most 100 records this way. If (end
+record) - (start record) specifies more than 100 records, or if the
+range specifies invalid records, or if the end record is before the
+start record, the server will respond with JSON failure.
+
+<h3><a name="api_info">/info/(user)</a> - Get information about a user</a></h3>
+
+<p>A GET request to /info/(user) will return a JSON object with
+information about the user (currently only the number of records). The
+info object looks like this:
+
+<pre>
+{
+ "record_count": "544"
+}
+</pre>
+
+<p>Again, the record count is sent as a string for 64-bit safety.
+
+<h3><a name="api_tag">/tag/(#|H|@)(tagname)</a> - Retrieve records containing tags</a></h3>
+
+<p>A GET request to this endpoint will return the last 50 records
+associated with the given tag. The first character is either # or H for
+hashtags, or @ for mentions (I call them ref tags). You should URL
+encode the # or @, lest some servers complain at you. The H alias for #
+was created because Apache helpfully strips the fragment of a URL
+(everything from the # to the end) before handing it off to the CGI,
+even if the hash is URL encoded. The record objects also contain an
+extra <code>author</code> field, like so:
+
+<pre>
+{
+ "author":"Jon",
+ "record":"57",
+ "timestamp":1294555793,
+ "data":"I'm taking #garfield to the vet."
+}
+</pre>
+
+<p>There is currently no support for getting more than 50 tags, but /tag
+will probably mutate to work like /get.
+
+<h3><a name="api_subscribe">/subscribe/(user)</a> - Subscribe to a
+user's updates</a></h3>
+
+<p>POST to /subscribe/(user) with a <code>username</code> parameter and
+an auth cookie, where (user) is the user whose updates you wish to
+subscribe to. The server will respond with JSON failure if the auth
+cookie is bad or if the user doesn't exist. The server will respond
+with JSON success after the subscription is successfully registered.
+
+<h3><a name="api_unsubscribe">/unsubscribe/(user)</a> - Unsubscribe from
+a user's updates</h3>
+
+<p>Identical to /subscribe, but removes the subscription.
+
+<h3><a name="api_feed">/feed</a> - Get updates for subscribed users</h3>
+
+<p>POST to /feed, with a <code>username</code> parameter and an auth
+cookie. The server will respond with a JSON list of the last 50 updates
+from all subscribed users, in reverse chronological order. Fetching
+/feed resets the new message count returned from /feedinfo.
+
+<p>NOTE: subscription notifications are only stored while subscriptions
+are active. Any records inserted before or after a subscription is
+active will not show up in /feed.
+
+<h3><a name="api_feedinfo">/feedinfo, /feedinfo/(user)</a> - Get subscription
+status for a user</a></h3>
+
+<p>POST to /feedinfo with a <code>username</code> parameter and an auth
+cookie to get general information about your subscribed feeds.
+Currently, this only tells you how many new records there are since the
+last time /feed was fetched. The server will respond with a JSON
+object:
+
+<pre>
+{"new":3}
+</pre>
+
+<p>POST to /feedinfo/(user) with a <code>username</code> parameter and
+an auth cookie, where (user) is a user whose subscription status you are
+interested in. The server will respond with a simple JSON object:
+
+<pre>
+{"subscribed":true}
+</pre>
+
+<p>The value of "subscribed" will be either true or false depending on
+the subscription status.