clws
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websockets server in CL
CLWS - a WebSocket server in Common Lisp
Currently requires SBCL or CCL, but shouldn't be too hard to port to other implementations/platforms supported by iolib.
Supports WebSocket draft protocols 7,8, and 13, and optionally 0.
Doesn't currently support wss: (TLS/SSL) connections, but proxying behind stud or stunnel should work.
Sample usage: Echo Server
First, set up a package:
(defpackage #:clws-echo
(:use :cl :clws))
(in-package #:clws-echo)
Then we can start the websockets server, here we use port 12345:
(bordeaux-threads:make-thread (lambda ()
(run-server 12345))
:name "websockets server")
Next we need to define a 'resource', which we will call /echo (so we will connect with URIs like ws://localhost/echo). To do that, we subclass ws-resource and specialize a few generic functions on that class:
(defclass echo-resource (ws-resource)
())
(defmethod resource-client-connected ((res echo-resource) client)
(format t "got connection on echo server from ~s : ~s~%" (client-host client) (client-port client))
t)
(defmethod resource-client-disconnected ((resource echo-resource) client)
(format t "Client disconnected from resource ~A: ~A~%" resource client))
(defmethod resource-received-text ((res echo-resource) client message)
(format t "got frame ~s from client ~s" message client)
(write-to-client-text client message))
(defmethod resource-received-binary((res echo-resource) client message)
(format t "got binary frame ~s from client ~s" (length message) client)
(write-to-client-binary client message))
Finally, we register the resource with the server, and start a thread to handle messages for that resource:
(register-global-resource "/echo"
(make-instance 'echo-resource)
(origin-prefix "http://127.0.0.1" "http://localhost"))
(bordeaux-threads:make-thread (lambda ()
(run-resource-listener
(find-global-resource "/echo")))
:name "resource listener for /echo")
Configuration variables
-
*protocol-76/00-support*: set to T to enable support for draft-hixie-76/draft-ietf-hybi-00 protocol
No longer used by current browsers, and doesn't support binary frames. May go away soon. -
*max-clients*: maximum number of simultaneous connections allowed, orNILfor no limit -
*max-read-frame-size*,*max-read-message-size*: maximum 'frame' and 'message' sizes allowed from clients.
Malicious clients can cause the server to buffer up to*max-read-message-size*per connection, so these should probably be reduced as much as possible for production servers. -
*debug-on-server-errors*,*debug-on-resource-errors*: set to T to enter debugger on errors instead of dropping connections, for the server thread and resource handler thread respectively.
Resource handler API
-
register-global-resource (name resource-handler origin-validation-function):
Registersresource-handlerfor the resourcename, which should be theabs_pathpart of a URI, like/foo/bar,origin-validation-functionshould be a function of one argument which returns true for any origin from which connections will be accepted. Seeany-origin,origin-prefix,origin-exact. ("Origin" in this case refers to the value of theOriginorSec-Webcosket-Originheader required to be sent by browsers, specifying the host from which the page was loaded, likehttp://localhost.) -
resource-received-text (resource client message): Resource handlers should specialize this generic function to handletextmessages from clients.messageis a lispstringcontaining the message fromclient. -
resource-received-binary (resource client message): Resource handlers should specialize this generic function to handlebinarymessages from clients.messageis a(vector (unsigned-byte 8))containing the message fromclient. -
resource-client-connected (resource client): Called to notify a resource handler when a client connects. If the handler objects to a particular client for some reason, it can return:rejectto close the connection and ignore any already received data from that client. -
resource-client-disconnected (resource client): Called when a client disconnects.
Sending data to clients
-
write-to-client-text (client message &key frame-size): Sendmessagetoclient.messageshould be a CLstringor a(simple-array (unsigned-byte 8) (*))containing a utf-8 encoded string. Ifframe-sizeis notnil, message will be broken up into frames offrame-sizeoctets. -
write-to-clients-text (clients message &key frame-size): Sendmessageto a list ofclients. Same aswrite-to-client-text, but tries to avoid repeated processing (utf-8 encoding, building frames, etc) that can be shared between clients. -
write-to-client-binary (client message &key frame-size): Sendmessagetoclient.messageshould be a(simple-array (unsigned-byte 8) (*)). Ifframe-sizeis notnil, message will be broken up into frames offrame-sizeoctets. -
write-to-clients-binary (clients message &key frame-size): Sendmessageto a list ofclients. Same aswrite-to-client-binary, but tries to avoid repeated processing (utf-8 encoding, building frames, etc) that can be shared between clients. -
write-to-client-close (client &key (code 1000) message): Send aclosemessage toclient.codespecifies the 'status code' to be send in the close message (see the [websocket spec][http://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-ietf-hybi-thewebsocketprotocol-15#section-7.4] for valid codes) defaults to 1000, indicating "normal closure".messagecan be a short string (must utf-8 encode to < 123 octets) describing the reason for closing the connection.
Getting information about connected clients
(most of these should be treated as read-only, and any visible setf
functions may go away at some point)
-
client-resource-name (client): Name of resource requested byclient. -
client-query-string (client): Query string (the part of the URI after #? if any) provided byclientwhen connecting.
For example if client connects tows://example.com/test?foo,client-resource-namewould return"/test"andclient-query-stringwould return"foo". -
client-websocket-version (client): Protocol version being used for specifiedclient. -
client-host (client): IP address of client, as a string. -
client-port (client): Port from which client connected. -
client-connection-headers (client): Hash table containing any HTTP headers supplied byclient, as a hash table of keywords (:user-agent,:cookie, etc) -> strings.