Package Usage: go: github.com/hktalent/websocket
Package websocket implements the WebSocket protocol defined in RFC 6455.
The Conn type represents a WebSocket connection. A server application calls
the Upgrader.Upgrade method from an HTTP request handler to get a *Conn:
Call the connection's WriteMessage and ReadMessage methods to send and
receive messages as a slice of bytes. This snippet of code shows how to echo
messages using these methods:
In above snippet of code, p is a []byte and messageType is an int with value
websocket.BinaryMessage or websocket.TextMessage.
An application can also send and receive messages using the io.WriteCloser
and io.Reader interfaces. To send a message, call the connection NextWriter
method to get an io.WriteCloser, write the message to the writer and close
the writer when done. To receive a message, call the connection NextReader
method to get an io.Reader and read until io.EOF is returned. This snippet
shows how to echo messages using the NextWriter and NextReader methods:
The WebSocket protocol distinguishes between text and binary data messages.
Text messages are interpreted as UTF-8 encoded text. The interpretation of
binary messages is left to the application.
This package uses the TextMessage and BinaryMessage integer constants to
identify the two data message types. The ReadMessage and NextReader methods
return the type of the received message. The messageType argument to the
WriteMessage and NextWriter methods specifies the type of a sent message.
It is the application's responsibility to ensure that text messages are
valid UTF-8 encoded text.
The WebSocket protocol defines three types of control messages: close, ping
and pong. Call the connection WriteControl, WriteMessage or NextWriter
methods to send a control message to the peer.
Connections handle received close messages by calling the handler function
set with the SetCloseHandler method and by returning a *CloseError from the
NextReader, ReadMessage or the message Read method. The default close
handler sends a close message to the peer.
Connections handle received ping messages by calling the handler function
set with the SetPingHandler method. The default ping handler sends a pong
message to the peer.
Connections handle received pong messages by calling the handler function
set with the SetPongHandler method. The default pong handler does nothing.
If an application sends ping messages, then the application should set a
pong handler to receive the corresponding pong.
The control message handler functions are called from the NextReader,
ReadMessage and message reader Read methods. The default close and ping
handlers can block these methods for a short time when the handler writes to
the connection.
The application must read the connection to process close, ping and pong
messages sent from the peer. If the application is not otherwise interested
in messages from the peer, then the application should start a goroutine to
read and discard messages from the peer. A simple example is:
Connections support one concurrent reader and one concurrent writer.
Applications are responsible for ensuring that no more than one goroutine
calls the write methods (NextWriter, SetWriteDeadline, WriteMessage,
WriteJSON, EnableWriteCompression, SetCompressionLevel) concurrently and
that no more than one goroutine calls the read methods (NextReader,
SetReadDeadline, ReadMessage, ReadJSON, SetPongHandler, SetPingHandler)
concurrently.
The Close and WriteControl methods can be called concurrently with all other
methods.
Web browsers allow Javascript applications to open a WebSocket connection to
any host. It's up to the server to enforce an origin policy using the Origin
request header sent by the browser.
The Upgrader calls the function specified in the CheckOrigin field to check
the origin. If the CheckOrigin function returns false, then the Upgrade
method fails the WebSocket handshake with HTTP status 403.
If the CheckOrigin field is nil, then the Upgrader uses a safe default: fail
the handshake if the Origin request header is present and the Origin host is
not equal to the Host request header.
The deprecated package-level Upgrade function does not perform origin
checking. The application is responsible for checking the Origin header
before calling the Upgrade function.
Connections buffer network input and output to reduce the number
of system calls when reading or writing messages.
Write buffers are also used for constructing WebSocket frames. See RFC 6455,
Section 5 for a discussion of message framing. A WebSocket frame header is
written to the network each time a write buffer is flushed to the network.
Decreasing the size of the write buffer can increase the amount of framing
overhead on the connection.
The buffer sizes in bytes are specified by the ReadBufferSize and
WriteBufferSize fields in the Dialer and Upgrader. The Dialer uses a default
size of 4096 when a buffer size field is set to zero. The Upgrader reuses
buffers created by the HTTP server when a buffer size field is set to zero.
The HTTP server buffers have a size of 4096 at the time of this writing.
The buffer sizes do not limit the size of a message that can be read or
written by a connection.
Buffers are held for the lifetime of the connection by default. If the
Dialer or Upgrader WriteBufferPool field is set, then a connection holds the
write buffer only when writing a message.
Applications should tune the buffer sizes to balance memory use and
performance. Increasing the buffer size uses more memory, but can reduce the
number of system calls to read or write the network. In the case of writing,
increasing the buffer size can reduce the number of frame headers written to
the network.
Some guidelines for setting buffer parameters are:
Limit the buffer sizes to the maximum expected message size. Buffers larger
than the largest message do not provide any benefit.
Depending on the distribution of message sizes, setting the buffer size to
a value less than the maximum expected message size can greatly reduce memory
use with a small impact on performance. Here's an example: If 99% of the
messages are smaller than 256 bytes and the maximum message size is 512
bytes, then a buffer size of 256 bytes will result in 1.01 more system calls
than a buffer size of 512 bytes. The memory savings is 50%.
A write buffer pool is useful when the application has a modest number
writes over a large number of connections. when buffers are pooled, a larger
buffer size has a reduced impact on total memory use and has the benefit of
reducing system calls and frame overhead.
Per message compression extensions (RFC 7692) are experimentally supported
by this package in a limited capacity. Setting the EnableCompression option
to true in Dialer or Upgrader will attempt to negotiate per message deflate
support.
If compression was successfully negotiated with the connection's peer, any
message received in compressed form will be automatically decompressed.
All Read methods will return uncompressed bytes.
Per message compression of messages written to a connection can be enabled
or disabled by calling the corresponding Conn method:
Currently this package does not support compression with "context takeover".
This means that messages must be compressed and decompressed in isolation,
without retaining sliding window or dictionary state across messages. For
more details refer to RFC 7692.
Use of compression is experimental and may result in decreased performance.
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