Public Member Functions | |
def | __init__ |
def | check_origin |
def | close |
def | get |
def | on_close |
def | on_connection_close |
def | on_message |
def | on_pong |
def | open |
def | ping |
def | select_subprotocol |
def | set_nodelay |
def | write_message |
Public Attributes | |
close_code | |
close_reason | |
open_args | |
open_kwargs | |
stream | |
ws_connection |
Subclass this class to create a basic WebSocket handler. Override `on_message` to handle incoming messages, and use `write_message` to send messages to the client. You can also override `open` and `on_close` to handle opened and closed connections. See http://dev.w3.org/html5/websockets/ for details on the JavaScript interface. The protocol is specified at http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc6455. Here is an example WebSocket handler that echos back all received messages back to the client:: class EchoWebSocket(websocket.WebSocketHandler): def open(self): print "WebSocket opened" def on_message(self, message): self.write_message(u"You said: " + message) def on_close(self): print "WebSocket closed" WebSockets are not standard HTTP connections. The "handshake" is HTTP, but after the handshake, the protocol is message-based. Consequently, most of the Tornado HTTP facilities are not available in handlers of this type. The only communication methods available to you are `write_message()`, `ping()`, and `close()`. Likewise, your request handler class should implement `open()` method rather than ``get()`` or ``post()``. If you map the handler above to ``/websocket`` in your application, you can invoke it in JavaScript with:: var ws = new WebSocket("ws://localhost:8888/websocket"); ws.onopen = function() { ws.send("Hello, world"); }; ws.onmessage = function (evt) { alert(evt.data); }; This script pops up an alert box that says "You said: Hello, world". Web browsers allow any site to open a websocket connection to any other, instead of using the same-origin policy that governs other network access from javascript. This can be surprising and is a potential security hole, so since Tornado 4.0 `WebSocketHandler` requires applications that wish to receive cross-origin websockets to opt in by overriding the `~WebSocketHandler.check_origin` method (see that method's docs for details). Failure to do so is the most likely cause of 403 errors when making a websocket connection. When using a secure websocket connection (``wss://``) with a self-signed certificate, the connection from a browser may fail because it wants to show the "accept this certificate" dialog but has nowhere to show it. You must first visit a regular HTML page using the same certificate to accept it before the websocket connection will succeed.
Definition at line 63 of file websocket.py.
def tornado.websocket.WebSocketHandler.__init__ | ( | self, | |
application, | |||
request, | |||
kwargs | |||
) |
Reimplemented from tornado.web.RequestHandler.
Definition at line 124 of file websocket.py.
def tornado.websocket.WebSocketHandler.check_origin | ( | self, | |
origin | |||
) |
Override to enable support for allowing alternate origins. The ``origin`` argument is the value of the ``Origin`` HTTP header, the url responsible for initiating this request. This method is not called for clients that do not send this header; such requests are always allowed (because all browsers that implement WebSockets support this header, and non-browser clients do not have the same cross-site security concerns). Should return True to accept the request or False to reject it. By default, rejects all requests with an origin on a host other than this one. This is a security protection against cross site scripting attacks on browsers, since WebSockets are allowed to bypass the usual same-origin policies and don't use CORS headers. To accept all cross-origin traffic (which was the default prior to Tornado 4.0), simply override this method to always return true:: def check_origin(self, origin): return True To allow connections from any subdomain of your site, you might do something like:: def check_origin(self, origin): parsed_origin = urllib.parse.urlparse(origin) return parsed_origin.netloc.endswith(".mydomain.com") .. versionadded:: 4.0
Reimplemented in rosbridge_server.websocket_handler.RosbridgeWebSocket.
Definition at line 275 of file websocket.py.
def tornado.websocket.WebSocketHandler.close | ( | self, | |
code = None , |
|||
reason = None |
|||
) |
Closes this Web Socket. Once the close handshake is successful the socket will be closed. ``code`` may be a numeric status code, taken from the values defined in `RFC 6455 section 7.4.1 <https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc6455#section-7.4.1>`_. ``reason`` may be a textual message about why the connection is closing. These values are made available to the client, but are not otherwise interpreted by the websocket protocol. .. versionchanged:: 4.0 Added the ``code`` and ``reason`` arguments.
Definition at line 255 of file websocket.py.
def tornado.websocket.WebSocketHandler.get | ( | self, | |
args, | |||
kwargs | |||
) |
Reimplemented from tornado.web.RequestHandler.
Definition at line 133 of file websocket.py.
def tornado.websocket.WebSocketHandler.on_close | ( | self | ) |
Invoked when the WebSocket is closed. If the connection was closed cleanly and a status code or reason phrase was supplied, these values will be available as the attributes ``self.close_code`` and ``self.close_reason``. .. versionchanged:: 4.0 Added ``close_code`` and ``close_reason`` attributes.
Reimplemented in rosbridge_server.websocket_handler.RosbridgeWebSocket, and tornado.test.websocket_test.TestWebSocketHandler.
Definition at line 242 of file websocket.py.
Called in async handlers if the client closed the connection. Override this to clean up resources associated with long-lived connections. Note that this method is called only if the connection was closed during asynchronous processing; if you need to do cleanup after every request override `on_finish` instead. Proxies may keep a connection open for a time (perhaps indefinitely) after the client has gone away, so this method may not be called promptly after the end user closes their connection.
Reimplemented from tornado.web.RequestHandler.
Definition at line 333 of file websocket.py.
def tornado.websocket.WebSocketHandler.on_message | ( | self, | |
message | |||
) |
Handle incoming messages on the WebSocket This method must be overridden.
Reimplemented in rosbridge_server.websocket_handler.RosbridgeWebSocket, tornado.test.websocket_test.ErrorInOnMessageHandler, and tornado.test.websocket_test.EchoHandler.
Definition at line 225 of file websocket.py.
def tornado.websocket.WebSocketHandler.on_pong | ( | self, | |
data | |||
) |
Invoked when the response to a ping frame is received.
Definition at line 238 of file websocket.py.
def tornado.websocket.WebSocketHandler.open | ( | self | ) |
Invoked when a new WebSocket is opened. The arguments to `open` are extracted from the `tornado.web.URLSpec` regular expression, just like the arguments to `tornado.web.RequestHandler.get`.
Reimplemented in tornado.test.websocket_test.CloseReasonHandler, rosbridge_server.websocket_handler.RosbridgeWebSocket, and tornado.test.websocket_test.HeaderHandler.
Definition at line 216 of file websocket.py.
def tornado.websocket.WebSocketHandler.ping | ( | self, | |
data | |||
) |
Send ping frame to the remote end.
Definition at line 232 of file websocket.py.
def tornado.websocket.WebSocketHandler.select_subprotocol | ( | self, | |
subprotocols | |||
) |
Invoked when a new WebSocket requests specific subprotocols. ``subprotocols`` is a list of strings identifying the subprotocols proposed by the client. This method may be overridden to return one of those strings to select it, or ``None`` to not select a subprotocol. Failure to select a subprotocol does not automatically abort the connection, although clients may close the connection if none of their proposed subprotocols was selected.
Definition at line 203 of file websocket.py.
def tornado.websocket.WebSocketHandler.set_nodelay | ( | self, | |
value | |||
) |
Set the no-delay flag for this stream. By default, small messages may be delayed and/or combined to minimize the number of packets sent. This can sometimes cause 200-500ms delays due to the interaction between Nagle's algorithm and TCP delayed ACKs. To reduce this delay (at the expense of possibly increasing bandwidth usage), call ``self.set_nodelay(True)`` once the websocket connection is established. See `.BaseIOStream.set_nodelay` for additional details. .. versionadded:: 3.1
Definition at line 317 of file websocket.py.
def tornado.websocket.WebSocketHandler.write_message | ( | self, | |
message, | |||
binary = False |
|||
) |
Sends the given message to the client of this Web Socket. The message may be either a string or a dict (which will be encoded as json). If the ``binary`` argument is false, the message will be sent as utf8; in binary mode any byte string is allowed. If the connection is already closed, raises `WebSocketClosedError`. .. versionchanged:: 3.2 `WebSocketClosedError` was added (previously a closed connection would raise an `AttributeError`)
Definition at line 183 of file websocket.py.
Definition at line 124 of file websocket.py.
Definition at line 124 of file websocket.py.
Definition at line 133 of file websocket.py.
Definition at line 133 of file websocket.py.
Definition at line 124 of file websocket.py.
Definition at line 124 of file websocket.py.