module EventMachine module WebSocket class Connection < EventMachine::Connection include Debugger attr_writer :max_frame_size # define WebSocket callbacks def onopen(&blk); @onopen = blk; end def onclose(&blk); @onclose = blk; end def onerror(&blk); @onerror = blk; end def onmessage(&blk); @onmessage = blk; end def onbinary(&blk); @onbinary = blk; end def onping(&blk); @onping = blk; end def onpong(&blk); @onpong = blk; end def trigger_on_message(msg) @onmessage.call(msg) if defined? @onmessage end def trigger_on_binary(msg) @onbinary.call(msg) if defined? @onbinary end def trigger_on_open(handshake) @onopen.call(handshake) if defined? @onopen end def trigger_on_close(event = {}) @onclose.call(event) if defined? @onclose end def trigger_on_ping(data) @onping.call(data) if defined? @onping end def trigger_on_pong(data) @onpong.call(data) if defined? @onpong end def trigger_on_error(reason) return false unless defined? @onerror @onerror.call(reason) true end def initialize(options) @options = options @debug = options[:debug] || false @secure = options[:secure] || false @secure_proxy = options[:secure_proxy] || false @tls_options = options[:tls_options] || {} @close_timeout = options[:close_timeout] @handler = nil debug [:initialize] end # Use this method to close the websocket connection cleanly # This sends a close frame and waits for acknowlegement before closing # the connection def close(code = nil, body = nil) if code && !acceptable_close_code?(code) raise "Application code may only use codes from 1000, 3000-4999" end close_websocket_private(code, body) end # Deprecated, to be removed in version 0.6 alias :close_websocket :close def post_init start_tls(@tls_options) if @secure end def receive_data(data) debug [:receive_data, data] if @handler @handler.receive_data(data) else dispatch(data) end rescue => e debug [:error, e] # There is no code defined for application errors, so use 3000 # (which is reserved for frameworks) close_websocket_private(3000, "Application error") # These are application errors - raise unless onerror defined trigger_on_error(e) || raise(e) end def unbind debug [:unbind, :connection] @handler.unbind if @handler rescue => e debug [:error, e] # These are application errors - raise unless onerror defined trigger_on_error(e) || raise(e) end def dispatch(data) if data.match(/\A/) send_flash_cross_domain_file else @handshake ||= begin handshake = Handshake.new(@secure || @secure_proxy) handshake.callback { |upgrade_response, handler_klass| debug [:accepting_ws_version, handshake.protocol_version] debug [:upgrade_response, upgrade_response] self.send_data(upgrade_response) @handler = handler_klass.new(self, @debug) @handshake = nil trigger_on_open(handshake) } handshake.errback { |e| debug [:error, e] trigger_on_error(e) # Handshake errors require the connection to be aborted abort } handshake end @handshake.receive_data(data) end end def send_flash_cross_domain_file file = '' debug [:cross_domain, file] send_data file # handle the cross-domain request transparently # no need to notify the user about this connection @onclose = nil close_connection_after_writing end # Cache encodings since it's moderately expensive to look them up each time ENCODING_SUPPORTED = "string".respond_to?(:force_encoding) UTF8 = Encoding.find("UTF-8") if ENCODING_SUPPORTED BINARY = Encoding.find("BINARY") if ENCODING_SUPPORTED # Send a WebSocket text frame. # # A WebSocketError may be raised if the connection is in an opening or a # closing state, or if the passed in data is not valid UTF-8 # def send_text(data) # If we're using Ruby 1.9, be pedantic about encodings if ENCODING_SUPPORTED # Also accept ascii only data in other encodings for convenience unless (data.encoding == UTF8 && data.valid_encoding?) || data.ascii_only? raise WebSocketError, "Data sent to WebSocket must be valid UTF-8 but was #{data.encoding} (valid: #{data.valid_encoding?})" end # This labels the encoding as binary so that it can be combined with # the BINARY framing data.force_encoding(BINARY) else # TODO: Check that data is valid UTF-8 end if @handler @handler.send_text_frame(data) else raise WebSocketError, "Cannot send data before onopen callback" end # Revert data back to the original encoding (which we assume is UTF-8) # Doing this to avoid duping the string - there may be a better way data.force_encoding(UTF8) if ENCODING_SUPPORTED return nil end alias :send :send_text # Send a WebSocket binary frame. # def send_binary(data) if @handler @handler.send_frame(:binary, data) else raise WebSocketError, "Cannot send binary before onopen callback" end end # Send a ping to the client. The client must respond with a pong. # # In the case that the client is running a WebSocket draft < 01, false # is returned since ping & pong are not supported # def ping(body = '') if @handler @handler.pingable? ? @handler.send_frame(:ping, body) && true : false else raise WebSocketError, "Cannot ping before onopen callback" end end # Send an unsolicited pong message, as allowed by the protocol. The # client is not expected to respond to this message. # # em-websocket automatically takes care of sending pong replies to # incoming ping messages, as the protocol demands. # def pong(body = '') if @handler @handler.pingable? ? @handler.send_frame(:pong, body) && true : false else raise WebSocketError, "Cannot ping before onopen callback" end end # Test whether the connection is pingable (i.e. the WebSocket draft in # use is >= 01) def pingable? if @handler @handler.pingable? else raise WebSocketError, "Cannot test whether pingable before onopen callback" end end def supports_close_codes? if @handler @handler.supports_close_codes? else raise WebSocketError, "Cannot test before onopen callback" end end def state @handler ? @handler.state : :handshake end # Returns the maximum frame size which this connection is configured to # accept. This can be set globally or on a per connection basis, and # defaults to a value of 10MB if not set. # # The behaviour when a too large frame is received varies by protocol, # but in the newest protocols the connection will be closed with the # correct close code (1009) immediately after receiving the frame header # def max_frame_size defined?(@max_frame_size) ? @max_frame_size : WebSocket.max_frame_size end def close_timeout @close_timeout || WebSocket.close_timeout end private # As definited in draft 06 7.2.2, some failures require that the server # abort the websocket connection rather than close cleanly def abort close_connection end def close_websocket_private(code, body) if @handler debug [:closing, code] @handler.close_websocket(code, body) else # The handshake hasn't completed - should be safe to terminate abort end end # Allow applications to close with 1000, 1003, 1008, 1011, 3xxx or 4xxx. # # em-websocket uses a few other codes internally which should not be # used by applications # # Browsers generally allow connections to be closed with code 1000, # 3xxx, and 4xxx. em-websocket allows closing with a few other codes # which seem reasonable (for discussion see # https://github.com/igrigorik/em-websocket/issues/98) # # Usage from the rfc: # # 1000 indicates a normal closure # # 1003 indicates that an endpoint is terminating the connection # because it has received a type of data it cannot accept # # 1008 indicates that an endpoint is terminating the connection because # it has received a message that violates its policy # # 1011 indicates that a server is terminating the connection because it # encountered an unexpected condition that prevented it from fulfilling # the request # # Status codes in the range 3000-3999 are reserved for use by libraries, # frameworks, and applications # # Status codes in the range 4000-4999 are reserved for private use and # thus can't be registered # def acceptable_close_code?(code) case code when 1000, 1003, 1008, 1011, (3000..4999) true else false end end end end end