This is a (mostly) pure JavaScript implementation of the WebSocket protocol versions 8 and 13 for Node. There are some example client and server applications that implement various interoperability testing protocols in the "test/scripts" folder.
You can read the full API documentation in the docs folder.
Current Version: 1.0.35 - Release 2024-05-12
- Updated from vulnerable version of es5-ext to a newer version that has been patched. Thanks, @Tringapps-Dharshan
All current browsers are fully* supported.
- Firefox 7-9 (Old) (Protocol Version 8)
- Firefox 10+ (Protocol Version 13)
- Chrome 14,15 (Old) (Protocol Version 8)
- Chrome 16+ (Protocol Version 13)
- Internet Explorer 10+ (Protocol Version 13)
- Safari 6+ (Protocol Version 13)
(Not all W3C WebSocket features are supported by browsers. More info in the Full API documentation)
There are some basic benchmarking sections in the Autobahn test suite. I've put up a benchmark page that shows the results from the Autobahn tests run against AutobahnServer 0.4.10, WebSocket-Node 1.0.2, WebSocket-Node 1.0.4, and ws 0.3.4.
(These benchmarks are quite a bit outdated at this point, so take them with a grain of salt. Anyone up for running new benchmarks? I'll link to your report.)
The very complete Autobahn Test Suite is used by most WebSocket implementations to test spec compliance and interoperability.
In your project root:
$ npm install websocket
Then in your code:
var WebSocketServer = require('websocket').server;
var WebSocketClient = require('websocket').client;
var WebSocketFrame = require('websocket').frame;
var WebSocketRouter = require('websocket').router;
var W3CWebSocket = require('websocket').w3cwebsocket;
- Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0
- Protocol version "8" and "13" (Draft-08 through the final RFC) framing and handshake
- Can handle/aggregate received fragmented messages
- Can fragment outgoing messages
- Router to mount multiple applications to various path and protocol combinations
- TLS supported for outbound connections via WebSocketClient
- TLS supported for server connections (use https.createServer instead of http.createServer)
- Thanks to pors for confirming this!
- Cookie setting and parsing
- Tunable settings
- Max Receivable Frame Size
- Max Aggregate ReceivedMessage Size
- Whether to fragment outgoing messages
- Fragmentation chunk size for outgoing messages
- Whether to automatically send ping frames for the purposes of keepalive
- Keep-alive ping interval
- Whether or not to automatically assemble received fragments (allows application to handle individual fragments directly)
- How long to wait after sending a close frame for acknowledgment before closing the socket.
-
W3C WebSocket API for applications running on both Node and browsers (via the
W3CWebSocket
class).
- No API for user-provided protocol extensions.
Here's a short example showing a server that echos back anything sent to it, whether utf-8 or binary.
#!/usr/bin/env node
var WebSocketServer = require('websocket').server;
var http = require('http');
var server = http.createServer(function(request, response) {
console.log((new Date()) + ' Received request for ' + request.url);
response.writeHead(404);
response.end();
});
server.listen(8080, function() {
console.log((new Date()) + ' Server is listening on port 8080');
});
wsServer = new WebSocketServer({
httpServer: server,
// You should not use autoAcceptConnections for production
// applications, as it defeats all standard cross-origin protection
// facilities built into the protocol and the browser. You should
// *always* verify the connection's origin and decide whether or not
// to accept it.
autoAcceptConnections: false
});
function originIsAllowed(origin) {
// put logic here to detect whether the specified origin is allowed.
return true;
}
wsServer.on('request', function(request) {
if (!originIsAllowed(request.origin)) {
// Make sure we only accept requests from an allowed origin
request.reject();
console.log((new Date()) + ' Connection from origin ' + request.origin + ' rejected.');
return;
}
var connection = request.accept('echo-protocol', request.origin);
console.log((new Date()) + ' Connection accepted.');
connection.on('message', function(message) {
if (message.type === 'utf8') {
console.log('Received Message: ' + message.utf8Data);
connection.sendUTF(message.utf8Data);
}
else if (message.type === 'binary') {
console.log('Received Binary Message of ' + message.binaryData.length + ' bytes');
connection.sendBytes(message.binaryData);
}
});
connection.on('close', function(reasonCode, description) {
console.log((new Date()) + ' Peer ' + connection.remoteAddress + ' disconnected.');
});
});
This is a simple example client that will print out any utf-8 messages it receives on the console, and periodically sends a random number.
This code demonstrates a client in Node.js, not in the browser
#!/usr/bin/env node
var WebSocketClient = require('websocket').client;
var client = new WebSocketClient();
client.on('connectFailed', function(error) {
console.log('Connect Error: ' + error.toString());
});
client.on('connect', function(connection) {
console.log('WebSocket Client Connected');
connection.on('error', function(error) {
console.log("Connection Error: " + error.toString());
});
connection.on('close', function() {
console.log('echo-protocol Connection Closed');
});
connection.on('message', function(message) {
if (message.type === 'utf8') {
console.log("Received: '" + message.utf8Data + "'");
}
});
function sendNumber() {
if (connection.connected) {
var number = Math.round(Math.random() * 0xFFFFFF);
connection.sendUTF(number.toString());
setTimeout(sendNumber, 1000);
}
}
sendNumber();
});
client.connect('ws://localhost:8080/', 'echo-protocol');
Same example as above but using the W3C WebSocket API.
var W3CWebSocket = require('websocket').w3cwebsocket;
var client = new W3CWebSocket('ws://localhost:8080/', 'echo-protocol');
client.onerror = function() {
console.log('Connection Error');
};
client.onopen = function() {
console.log('WebSocket Client Connected');
function sendNumber() {
if (client.readyState === client.OPEN) {
var number = Math.round(Math.random() * 0xFFFFFF);
client.send(number.toString());
setTimeout(sendNumber, 1000);
}
}
sendNumber();
};
client.onclose = function() {
console.log('echo-protocol Client Closed');
};
client.onmessage = function(e) {
if (typeof e.data === 'string') {
console.log("Received: '" + e.data + "'");
}
};
For an example of using the request router, see libwebsockets-test-server.js
in the test
folder.
A presentation on the state of the WebSockets protocol that I gave on July 23, 2011 at the LA Hacker News meetup. WebSockets: The Real-Time Web, Delivered