WebSocket Express
Extends express with WebSocket capabilities
from ws. This allows an easy syntax
for handling WebSockets as well as allowing a single server to handle
both HTTP and WebSocket requests.
This project is similar to (and takes some inspiration from
express-ws, but chooses to
provide a separate API rather than monkeypatching the express objects,
and supports asynchronous operations in all locations.
Install dependency
npm install --save websocket-express ws express @types/ws @types/express
(ws
and express
are required as peer dependencies of
websocket-express
. You can use express
version 4 or 5.
@types/ws
and @types/express
must be added even if you
are not using TypeScript in your project)
Usage
import { WebSocketExpress, Router } from 'websocket-express';
const app = new WebSocketExpress();
const router = new Router();
router.ws('/path/foo', async (req, res) => {
const ws = await res.accept();
ws.on('message', (msg) => {
ws.send(`echo ${msg}`);
});
ws.send('hello');
});
router.ws('/path/bar', async (req, res) => {
const ws = await res.accept();
ws.send('who are you?');
const message = await ws.nextMessage({ timeout: 1000 });
ws.send(`hello, ${message.data}`);
ws.close();
});
router.ws('/path/ws-async', async (req, res, next) => {
const acceptable = await myAsynchronousOperation();
if (acceptable) {
const ws = await res.accept();
ws.send('hello');
} else {
next();
}
});
router.ws('/path/transactional', async (req, res) => {
const ws = await res.accept();
try {
res.beginTransaction();
ws.send('hello');
ws.send('this is a long series of messages');
ws.send('and all messages will be sent');
ws.send('even if the server is asked to close()');
ws.send('although they may be stopped if the server crashes');
await myAsynchronousOperation();
ws.send('still included');
} finally {
res.endTransaction();
}
ws.send('this message might not be included');
ws.send('because the transaction has finished');
});
router.get('/path/foo', (req, res) => {
res.end('response to a normal HTTP GET request');
});
app.use(router);
app.useHTTP(middleware);
app.set('shutdown timeout', 1000);
const server = app.createServer();
server.listen(8080);
const server = http.createServer();
app.attach(server);
server.listen(8080);
If you have a vanilla express Router
or middleware (e.g. from an
external library), it is recommended to use useHTTP
rather than use
to attach it, to ensure it is not confused by WebSocket requests.
The static
, json
and urlencoded
middleware is bundled by default
and ignores WebSocket requests, so use
is fine:
import { WebSocketExpress } from 'websocket-express';
const app = new WebSocketExpress();
app.use(WebSocketExpress.static(myDirectory));
Example integration with an external websocket server library (socket.io):
import { Server } from 'socket.io';
import { WebSocketExpress } from 'websocket-express';
const app = new WebSocketExpress();
app.ws('/socket.io/*', (req, res) => res.abandon());
const server = app.createServer();
const socketioServer = new Server(server);
server.listen(8080);
Note that if you abandon
a request which is not handled by another
library, the connection will hang until the client eventually times out.
This may be particularly problematic when shutting down the server:
websocket-express
will normally close all remaining websocket
connections automatically when server.close
is called, but it will
not close abandoned connections. This may delay the process termination,
as NodeJS will remain active as long as any connections are open.
API
The main method is Router.ws
. This accepts a (possibly asynchronous)
function with 3 parameters: the request, the response, and a next
callback to be invoked if the request is rejected for any reason.
If the request is accepted, the function should call accept
to get a
WebSocket, attach message
and close
event listeners and can
continue to handle the WebSocket as normal.
If the request is rejected, next
should be called (possibly with an
error description), and the next possible handler, or the error
handler, will be called (according to the standard express logic).
If no handlers are able to accept a WebSocket request, it will be
closed (with code 4404 by default). If you want another library to
handle the request (e.g. socket.io), you can call abandon
to stop
any further handling of the request.
If an exception is thrown, the socket will be closed with code 1011.
As with get
/ post
/ etc. it is possible to register a WebSocket
handler under the same URL as a non-websocket handler.
-
Router.useHTTP
/ App.useHTTP
behaves like Router.use
in
express. It will invoke the middleware or router for all
non-WebSocket requests.
-
Router.all
is similarly updated to apply only to non-WebSocket
requests.
-
Router.use
/ App.use
will invoke the middleware or router for
all requests.
-
Router.ws
will invoke the middleware only for WebSocket requests.
-
App.createServer
is a convenience method which creates a server and
calls attach
(see below).
-
App.attach
will attach the necessary event listeners to the given
server (e.g. if you want to use a https server, or a long-lived
server with hot reloading).
-
App.detach
will remove all attached event listeners from the given
server.
-
App.set('shutdown timeout', millis)
configures a timeout (in
milliseconds) used by close()
, after which connections will be
forced to close even if they are in a transaction.
The response
parameter passed to websocket handlers has additional
methods:
-
res.accept()
accepts the protocol switch, establishing the
websocket connection. This returns a promise which resolves to the
newly established websocket.
-
res.reject([httpStatus[, message]])
returns a HTTP error instead
of accepting the websocket connection. Defaults to HTTP 500.
-
res.abandon()
stops all further processing of the connection. This
should be used if you want to delegate to another library which has
also registered an upgrade
listener on the server. Note that this
is provided as an escape hatch; in general you should try to
accept
the connection and pass the websocket to other libraries,
as this will handle lifecycle events (such as closing the server)
more gracefully.
-
res.sendError(httpStatus[, websocketErrorCode[, message]])
sends
a HTTP or websocket error and closes the connection. If no explicit
websocket error code is provided and the websocket connection has
already been established, this will default to 4000 + httpStatus
(e.g. HTTP 404 becomes websocket error 4404).
-
res.send(message)
shorthand for accepting the connection, sending
a message, then closing the connection. Provided for compatibility
with the express
API.
-
res.beginTransaction()
/ res.endTransaction()
mark (nestable)
transactions on the websocket connection. While a transaction is
active, websocket-express
will avoid closing the connection
(e.g. during server shutdown). These should be used to wrap
short-lived sequences of messages which need to be sent together.
Do not use these for long-lived operations, as it will delay
server shutdown. To ensure endTransaction
is called, it is
recommended that you use the pattern:
try {
res.beginTransaction();
} finally {
res.endTransaction();
}
The WebSocket returned by accept
has some additional helper methods:
-
ws.nextMessage
will return a promise which resolves with the next
message received by the websocket. If the socket closes before a
message arrives, the promise will be rejected. You can also specify
a timeout (with nextMessage({ timeout: millis })
) to reject if no
message is received within the requested time.
The object returned by nextMessage
has a data
element (a
String
if using ws
7.x and the message is text, or a Buffer
if the message is binary, or if using ws
8.x), and an isBinary
boolean. You can use String(message.data)
to convert the Buffer
to a string using UTF8 encoding, matching ws
7.x's behaviour.