=encoding utf-8 =head1 NAME Net::WebSocket - WebSocket in Perl =head1 SYNOPSIS use Net::WebSocket::Handshake::Client (); use Net::WebSocket::HTTP_R (); my $handshake = Net::WebSocket::Handshake::Client->new( uri => $uri, ); syswrite $inet, $handshake->to_string() or die $!; #You can parse HTTP headers however you want; #Net::WebSocket makes no assumptions about this. my $resp = HTTP::Response->parse($hdrs_txt); #If you use an interface that’s compatible with HTTP::Response, #then you can take advantage of this convenience function; #otherwise you’ll need to do a bit more work. Net::WebSocket::HTTP_R::handshake_parse_response( $handshake, $resp ); #See below about IO::Framed my $iof = IO::Framed->new($inet); my $parser = Net::WebSocket::Parser->new($iof); my $ept = Net::WebSocket::Endpoint::Client->new( parser => $parser, out => $iof, ); $iof_w->write( Net::WebSocket::Frame::text->new( payload => 'Hello, world' ) ); #Determine that $inet can be read from … my $msg = $ept->get_next_message(); #… or, if we timeout while waiting for $inet to be ready for reading: $ept->check_heartbeat(); exit if $ept->is_closed(); =head1 BETA QUALITY This is a beta release. It should be safe for production, but there could still be small changes to the API. Please check the changelog before upgrading. =head1 DESCRIPTION This distribution provides a set of fundamental tools for communicating via L. It is only concerned with the protocol itself; the underlying transport mechanism is up to you: it could be a file, a UNIX socket, ordinary TCP/IP, some funky Cd object, or whatever. Net::WebSocket also “has no opinions” about how you should do I/O or HTTP headers. There are too many different ways to accomplish HTTP header management in particular for it to be sensible for a WebSocket library to impose any one approach. As a result of this, Net::WebSocket can probably fit your project with minimal overhead. There are some examples of how you might write complete applications (client or server) in the distribution’s F directory. Net::WebSocket emphasizes flexibility and lightness rather than the more monolithic approach in modules like L. Net::WebSocket should support anything that the WebSocket protocol itself can do, as lightly as possible and without prejudice as to how you want to do it: extensions, streaming, blocking or non-blocking I/O, arbitrary HTTP headers, etc. The end result should be a clean, light implementation that will grow (or shrink!) as your needs dictate. =head1 OVERVIEW Here are the main modules: =over =item L =item L Logic for handshakes. Every application needs one of these. As of version 0.5 this handles all headers and can also do subprotocol and extension negotiation for you. =item L A thin convenience wrapper for L and L, CPAN’s “standard” classes to represent HTTP requests and responses. Net::WebSocket::HTTP_R should also work with other classes whose interfaces are compatible with these “standard” ones. =item L =item L A high-level abstraction to parse input and respond to control frames and timeouts. You can use this to receive streamed (i.e., fragmented) transmissions as well. You don’t have to use this module, but it will make your life easier. =item L Translate WebSocket frames out of a filehandle into useful data for your application. =item L =item L Useful for sending streamed (fragmented) data rather than a full message in a single frame. =item Net::WebSocket::Frame::* Useful for creating raw frames. You probably shouldn’t call this class directly; instead, use Endpoint’s C method. But if you want to dig deeply, these will be your bread and butter. See L for sample usage. =back =head1 IMPLEMENTATION NOTES =head2 Handshakes WebSocket uses regular HTTP headers for its handshakes. Because there are many different solutions around for parsing HTTP headers, Net::WebSocket is “agnostic” about how that’s done. The advantage is that if you’ve got a custom solution for parsing headers then Net::WebSocket can fit into that quite easily. The liability of this is that you, the library user, must give headers directly to your Handshake object. (NB: L might be able to do this for you.) =head2 Masking As per L, client serializers “MUST” mask the data randomly, whereas server serializers “MUST NOT” do this. Net::WebSocket does this for you automatically, but you need to distinguish between client serializers—which mask their payloads—and server serializers, which don’t mask. This module used to do this with L, but that seems like overkill given that the masking is only there to accommodate peculiarities of certain proxies. Moreover, TLS is widely available and free now, and it will effectively randomize the data stream anyway. So, nowadays we just use Perl’s C built-in. =head2 Text vs. Binary Recall that in some languages—like JavaScript!—the difference between “text” and “binary” is much more significant than for us in Perl. =head2 Use of L CPAN’s L provides a straightforward interface for chunking up data from byte streams into frames. It also provides a write buffer for non-blocking writes, and it (by default) retries on EINTR. You don’t have to use it (which is why it’s not listed as a requirement), but you’ll need to provide a compatible interface if you don’t. See the demo scripts that use L for an example of when you may need a different solution here. =head1 EXTENSION SUPPORT The WebSocket specification describes several methods of extending the protocol, all of which Net::WebSocket supports: =over =item * The three reserved bits in each frame’s header. (See L.) This is used, e.g., in the L. =item * Additional opcodes: 3-7 and 11-15. You’ll need to subclass L for this, and you will likely want to subclass L. If you’re using the custom classes for streaming, then you can also subclass L. See each of those modules for more information on doing this. B Proceed with caution, and please file bug reports as needed. (I personally don’t know of any applications that actually use this.) =item * Apportion part of the payload data for the extension. This you can do in your application. =back =head2 permessage-deflate Net::WebSocket 0.5 introduces support for the permessage-delate extension to allow compressed messages over WebSocket. See L for more details. =head1 TODO At this point Net::WebSocket seems to support everything the WebSocket protocol can (usefully) do, including compression. =over =item * Add more tests. =back =head1 SEE ALSO L has a WebSocket implementation. It’s not as complete as Net::WebSocket, but if you’re using Mojolicious, you might try this first. L is an older module that supports pre-standard versions of the WebSocket protocol. It’s similar to this one in that it gives you just the protocol itself, but it doesn’t give you things like automatic ping/pong/close, classes for each message type, etc. L implements only server behaviors and gives you more automation than P::WS. L uses XS to call L. As of this writing it lacks support for handshake logic. =head1 REPOSITORY L =head1 AUTHOR Felipe Gasper (FELIPE) =head1 COPYRIGHT Copyright 2017 by L =head1 LICENSE This distribution is released under the same license as Perl.