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WebSockets is a technology, based on the ws protocol, that makes it possible to establish a continuous full-duplex connection stream between a client and a server. A typical websocket client would be a user's browser, but the protocol is platform independent.
Availability of WebSockets
The WebSocket API is available to JavaScript code whose scope is either a DOM Window
object or any object implementing WorkerUtils
; that is, you can use it from Web Workers.
Creating a WebSocket object
In order to communicate using the WebSocket protocol, you need to create a WebSocket
object; this will automatically attempt to open the connection to the server.
The WebSocket constructor accepts one required and one optional parameter:
WebSocket WebSocket( in DOMString url, in optional DOMString protocols );
url
- The URL to which to connect; this should be the URL to which the WebSocket server will respond.
protocols
Optional- Either a single protocol string or an array of protocol strings. These strings are used to indicate sub-protocols, so that a single server can implement multiple WebSocket sub-protocols (for example, you might want one server to be able to handle different types of interactions depending on the specified
protocol
). If you don't specify a protocol string, an empty string is assumed.
The constructor can throw exceptions:
SECURITY_ERR
- The port to which the connection is being attempted is being blocked.
Connection errors
If an error occurs while attempting to connect, first a simple event with the name "error" is sent to the WebSocket
object (thereby invoking its onerror
handler), and then the CloseEvent
is sent to the WebSocket
object (thereby invoking its onclose
handler) to indicate the reason for the connection's closing.
As of Firefox 11 however, it is typical to receive a descriptive error message in the console from the Mozilla platform, and a closing code as defined in RFC 6455, Section 7.4 through the CloseEvent
.
Examples
This simple example creates a new WebSocket, connecting to the server at ws://www.example.com/socketserver
. A custom protocol of "protocolOne" is named in the request for the socket in this example, though this can be omitted.
var exampleSocket = new WebSocket("ws://www.example.com/socketserver", "protocolOne");
On return, exampleSocket
.readyState
is CONNECTING
. The readyState
will become OPEN
once the connection is ready to transfer data.
If you want to open a connection and are flexible about the protocols you support, you can specify an array of protocols:
var exampleSocket = new WebSocket("ws://www.example.com/socketserver", ["protocolOne", "protocolTwo"]);
Once the connection is established (that is, readyState
is OPEN
), exampleSocket.protocol
will tell you which protocol the server selected.
In the above examples ws
has replaced http
, similarly wss
replaces https
. Establishing a WebSocket relies on the HTTP Upgrade mechanism, so the request for the protocol upgrade is implicit when we address the HTTP server as ws://www.example.com
or wss://www.example.com
.
Sending data to the server
Once you've opened your connection, you can begin transmitting data to the server. To do this, simply call the WebSocket
object's send()
method for each message you want to send:
exampleSocket.send("Here's some text that the server is urgently awaiting!");
You can send data as a string, Blob
, or ArrayBuffer
.
As establishing a connection is asynchronous and prone to failure there is no guarantee that calling the send()
method immediately after creating a WebSocket object will be successful. We can at least be sure that attempting to send data only takes place once a connection is established by defining an onopen
handler to do the work:
exampleSocket.onopen = function (event) { exampleSocket.send("Here's some text that the server is urgently awaiting!"); };
Using JSON to transmit objects
One handy thing you can do is use JSON to send reasonably complex data to the server. For example, a chat program can interact with a server using a protocol implemented using packets of JSON-encapsulated data:
// Send text to all users through the server function sendText() { // Construct a msg object containing the data the server needs to process the message from the chat client. var msg = { type: "message", text: document.getElementById("text").value, id: clientID, date: Date.now() }; // Send the msg object as a JSON-formatted string. exampleSocket.send(JSON.stringify(msg)); // Blank the text input element, ready to receive the next line of text from the user. document.getElementById("text").value = ""; }
Receiving messages from the server
WebSockets is an event-driven API; when messages are received, a "message" event is delivered to the onmessage
function. To begin listening for incoming data, you can do something like this:
exampleSocket.onmessage = function (event) { console.log(event.data); }
Receiving and interpreting JSON objects
Let's consider the chat client application first alluded to in Using JSON to transmit objects. There are assorted types of data packets the client might receive, such as:
- Login handshake
- Message text
- User list updates
The code that interprets these incoming messages might look like this:
exampleSocket.onmessage = function(event) { var f = document.getElementById("chatbox").contentDocument; var text = ""; var msg = JSON.parse(event.data); var time = new Date(msg.date); var timeStr = time.toLocaleTimeString(); switch(msg.type) { case "id": clientID = msg.id; setUsername(); break; case "username": text = "<b>User <em>" + msg.name + "</em> signed in at " + timeStr + "</b><br>"; break; case "message": text = "(" + timeStr + ") <b>" + msg.name + "</b>: " + msg.text + "<br>"; break; case "rejectusername": text = "<b>Your username has been set to <em>" + msg.name + "</em> because the name you chose is in use.</b><br>" break; case "userlist": var ul = ""; for (i=0; i < msg.users.length; i++) { ul += msg.users[i] + "<br>"; } document.getElementById("userlistbox").innerHTML = ul; break; } if (text.length) { f.write(text); document.getElementById("chatbox").contentWindow.scrollByPages(1); } };
Here we use JSON.parse()
to convert the JSON object back into the original object, then examine and act upon its contents.
Text data format
Text received over a WebSocket connection is in UTF-8 format.
Prior to Gecko 9.0 (Firefox 9.0 / Thunderbird 9.0 / SeaMonkey 2.6), certain non-characters in otherwise valid UTF-8 text would cause the connection to be terminated. Now Gecko permits these values.
Closing the connection
When you've finished using the WebSocket connection, call the WebSocket method close()
:
exampleSocket.close();
It may be helpful to examine the socket's bufferedAmount
attribute before attempting to close the connection to determine if any data has yet to be transmitted on the network.
Security considerations
WebSockets should not be used in a mixed content environment; that is, you shouldn't open a non-secure WebSocket connection from a page loaded using HTTPS or vice-versa. In fact, some browsers explicitly forbid this, including Firefox 8 and later.