WebSockAdapter is a library of adapters from common Web Servers to the
WebSock
specification. WebSockAdapter currently supports
Bandit and
Cowboy.
For details on the WebSock
specification, consult the
WebSock documentation.
WebSockAdapter makes it easy to upgrade Plug connections to WebSock connections. Here's a simple example:
defmodule EchoServer do
def init(args) do
{:ok, []}
end
def handle_in({"ping", [opcode: :text]}, state) do
{:reply, :ok, {:text, "pong"}, state}
end
end
defmodule MyPlug do
use Plug.Router
plug Plug.Logger
plug :match
plug :dispatch
get "/" do
# Provide the user with some useful instructions to copy & paste into their inspector
send_resp(conn, 200, """
Use the JavaScript console to interact using websockets
sock = new WebSocket("ws://localhost:4000/websocket")
sock.addEventListener("message", console.log)
sock.addEventListener("open", () => sock.send("ping"))
""")
end
get "/websocket" do
conn
|> WebSockAdapter.upgrade(EchoServer, [], timeout: 60_000)
|> halt()
end
match _ do
send_resp(conn, 404, "not found")
end
end
This simple example illustrates many of the useful features of WebSock / WebSockAdapters:
- Implementing a WebSocket server is a single module, and looks & acts much like a GenServer does
- It's easy to pass state from the
WebSockAdapter.upgrade/3
call & have it show up in your WebSock callbacks - Upgrades are handled as a plain Plug call. You are able to route requests to your upgrade endpoint using all of the power of the Plug API
If you're looking for more detail, Benjamin Milde has a great blog post that goes a bit deeper than the simple example above.
Since 0.5.5
, WebSockAdapter validates requests made via
WebSockAdapter.upgrade/3
(this was and continues to also be done by the
underlying web server, but since the server's validation occurs after the
Plug.call/2
lifecycle completes it's difficult to meaningfully handle such
errors). This validation examines the request for conformance to the clauses
laid out in RFC6455§4.2, as well as RFC8441§5 for HTTP/2 connections. Requests
which do not satisfy the requirements laid out in those specifications will
result in a WebSockAdapter.UpgradeError
being raised, containing
details of the reason for the failure
The websock_adapter package can be installed by adding websock_adapter
to your list of dependencies in mix.exs
:
def deps do
[
{:websock_adapter, "~> 0.5"}
]
end
Documentation can be found at https://hexdocs.pm/websock_adapter.
MIT