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A standalone implementation of websockets (RFC 6455).

Project description

About

wspy is a standalone implementation of web sockets for Python, defined by RFC 6455. The incentive for creating this library is the absence of a layered implementation of web sockets outside the scope of web servers such as Apache or Nginx. wspy does not require any third-party programs or libraries outside Python’s standard library. It provides low-level access to sockets, as well as high-level functionalities to easily set up a web server. Thus, it is both suited for quick server programming, as well as for more demanding applications that require low-level control over each frame being sent/received.

Here is a quick overview of the features in this library: - Upgrading regular sockets to web sockets. - Building custom frames (see “Sending frames with a websocket”). - Messages, which are higher-level than frames (see “Sending messages with a a connection”). - Connections, which hide the handling of control frames and automatically concatenate fragmented messages to individual payloads. - HTTP authentication during handshake. - An extendible server implementation. - Secure sockets using SSL certificates (for ‘wss://…’ URLs). - An API for implementing WebSocket extensions. Included implementations are deflate-frame and permessage-deflate. - Threaded and asynchronous (EPOLL-based) server implementations.

Installation

Using Python’s package manager:

sudo pip install wspy

Getting Started

The following example is an echo server (sends back what it receives) and can be used out of the box to connect with a browser. The API is similar to that of web sockets in JavaScript:

import logging
import wspy

class EchoServer(wspy.AsyncServer):
    def onopen(self, client):
        print 'Client %s connected' % client

    def onmessage(self, client, message):
        print 'Received message "%s"' % message.payload
        client.send(wspy.TextMessage(message.payload))

    def onclose(self, client, code, reason):
        print 'Client %s disconnected' % client

EchoServer(('', 8000),
           extensions=[wspy.DeflateMessage(), wspy.DeflateFrame()],
           loglevel=logging.DEBUG).run()

Corresponding client code (JavaScript, run in browser):

var ws = new WebSocket('ws://localhost:8000');
ws.onopen = function() {
    console.log('open');
    this.send('Hello, World!');
};
ws.onmessage = function(e) {
    console.log('message', e.data);
};
ws.onerror = function() {
    console.log('error');
};
ws.onclose = function(e) {
    console.log('close', e.code, e.reason);
};

Sending frames with a websocket

The websocket class upgrades a regular socket to a web socket. A websocket instance is a single end point of a connection. A websocket instance sends and receives frames (Frame instances) as opposed to bytes (which are sent/received in a regular socket).

Server example:

import wspy, socket
sock = wspy.websocket()
sock.setsockopt(socket.SOL_SOCKET, socket.SO_REUSEADDR, 1)
sock.bind(('', 8000))
sock.listen(5)

client = sock.accept()
client.send(wspy.Frame(wspy.OPCODE_TEXT, 'Hello, Client!'))
frame = client.recv()

Client example:

import wspy
sock = wspy.websocket(location='/my/path')
sock.connect(('', 8000))
sock.send(wspy.Frame(wspy.OPCODE_TEXT, 'Hello, Server!'))

Sending messages with a connection

A Connection instance represents a connection between two end points, based on a websocket instance. A connection handles control frames properly, and sends/receives messages (Message instances, which are higher-level than frames). Messages are automatically converted to frames, and received frames are converted to messages. Fragmented messages (messages consisting of multiple frames) are also supported.

Example of an echo server (sends back what it receives):

import socket
import wspy

class EchoConnection(wspy.Connection):
    def onopen(self):
        print 'Connection opened at %s:%d' % self.sock.getpeername()

    def onmessage(self, message):
        print 'Received message "%s"' % message.payload
        self.send(wspy.TextMessage(message.payload))

    def onclose(self, code, reason):
        print 'Connection closed'

server = wspy.websocket()
server.setsockopt(socket.SOL_SOCKET, socket.SO_REUSEADDR, 1)
server.bind(('', 8000))
server.listen(5)

while True:
    client, addr = server.accept()
    EchoConnection(client).receive_forever()

There are two types of messages: TextMessages and BinaryMessages. A TextMessage uses frames with opcode OPCODE_TEXT, and encodes its payload using UTF-8 encoding. A BinaryMessage just sends its payload as raw data. I recommend using TextMessage by default, and BinaryMessage only when necessary.

Managing connections with a server

Threaded

The Server class is very basic. It starts a new thread with a Connection.receive_forever() loop for each client that connects. It also handles client crashes properly. By default, a Server instance only logs every event using Python’s logging module. To create a custom server, The Server class should be extended and its event handlers overwritten. The event handlers are named identically to the Connection event handlers, but they also receive an additional client argument. The client argument is a modified Connection instance, so you can invoke send() and recv().

For example, the EchoConnection example above can be rewritten to:

import wspy

class EchoServer(wspy.Server):
    def onopen(self, client):
        print 'Client %s connected' % client

    def onmessage(self, client, message):
        print 'Received message "%s"' % message.payload
        client.send(wspy.TextMessage(message.payload))

    def onclose(self, client, code, reason):
        print 'Client %s disconnected' % client

EchoServer(('', 8000)).run()

The server can be stopped by typing CTRL-C in the command line. The KeyboardInterrupt raised when this happens is caught by the server, making it exit gracefully.

The full list of overwritable methods is: onopen, onmessage, onclose, onerror, onping, onpong.

The server uses Python’s built-in logging module for logging. Try passing the argument loglevel=logging.DEBUG to the server constructor if you are having trouble debugging.

Extensions

TODO

Secure sockets with SSL

TODO

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