Skip to content

elixir-mint/mint_web_socket

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

Mint.WebSocket

CI Coverage Status hex.pm version hex.pm license Last Updated

HTTP/1 and HTTP/2 WebSocket support for Mint 🌱

Usage

Mint.WebSocket works together with Mint.HTTP API. For example, this snippet shows sending and receiving a text frame of "hello world" to a WebSocket server which echos our frames:

# bootstrap
{:ok, conn} = Mint.HTTP.connect(:http, "echo", 9000)

{:ok, conn, ref} = Mint.WebSocket.upgrade(:ws, conn, "/", [])

http_get_message = receive(do: (message -> message))
{:ok, conn, [{:status, ^ref, status}, {:headers, ^ref, resp_headers}, {:done, ^ref}]} =
  Mint.WebSocket.stream(conn, http_get_message)

{:ok, conn, websocket} = Mint.WebSocket.new(conn, ref, status, resp_headers)

# send the hello world frame
{:ok, websocket, data} = Mint.WebSocket.encode(websocket, {:text, "hello world"})
{:ok, conn} = Mint.WebSocket.stream_request_body(conn, ref, data)

# receive the hello world reply frame
hello_world_echo_message = receive(do: (message -> message))
{:ok, conn, [{:data, ^ref, data}]} = Mint.WebSocket.stream(conn, hello_world_echo_message)
{:ok, websocket, [{:text, "hello world"}]} = Mint.WebSocket.decode(websocket, data)

Check out some examples and the online documentation.

Functional WebSockets

Mint.WebSocket (like Mint) takes a functional approach. Other WebSocket implementations like :gun / :websocket_client / Socket / WebSockex work by spawning and passing messages among processes. This is a very convenient interface in Erlang and Elixir but it does not allow the author much control over the WebSocket connection.

Instead Mint.WebSocket is process-less: the entire HTTP and WebSocket states are kept in immutable data structures. When you implement a WebSocket client with Mint.WebSocket, runtime behavior and process architecture are up to you: you decide how to handle things like reconnection and failures.

For a practical introduction, check out Mint's usage documentation.

Spec conformance

This library aims to follow RFC6455 and RFC8441 as closely as possible and uses the Autobahn|Testsuite to check conformance with every run of tests/CI. The auto-generated report produced by the Autobahn|Testsuite is uploaded on each push to main.

See the report here: https://elixir-mint.github.io/mint_web_socket/

HTTP/2 Support

HTTP/2 WebSockets are not a built-in feature of HTTP/2. In the current landscape, very few server libraries support the RFC8441's extended CONNECT method which bootstraps WebSockets.

If Mint.WebSocket.upgrade/4 returns

{:error, conn, %Mint.WebSocketError{reason: :extended_connect_disabled}}

Then the server does not support HTTP/2 WebSockets or does not have them enabled.

Development workflow

Contributions are very welcome!

If you're interested in developing Mint.WebSocket, you'll need docker-compose to run the fuzzing test suite. The docker-compose.yml sets up an Elixir container, a simple websocket echo server, and the Autobahn|Testsuite fuzzing server.

In host:

docker-compose up -d
docker-compose exec app bash

In app:

mix deps.get
mix test
iex -S mix