Websocket server » History » Version 9
Tom Clegg, 10/25/2016 07:11 PM
1 | 1 | Tom Clegg | h1. Websocket server |
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3 | 8 | Tom Clegg | (draft) |
4 | 1 | Tom Clegg | |
5 | {{toc}} |
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6 | |||
7 | 8 | Tom Clegg | See also: [[Events API]] |
8 | 1 | Tom Clegg | |
9 | 8 | Tom Clegg | h1. Messages |
10 | 1 | Tom Clegg | |
11 | 8 | Tom Clegg | Each message is JSON-encoded as an object with exactly one key. The key indicates the message type, and the value contains the message content. |
12 | 1 | Tom Clegg | |
13 | 8 | Tom Clegg | This allows clients and servers to decode messages efficiently: decode the first token to determine the message type, then (if the message content is relevant) decode the message payload into an appropriate data structure. |
14 | 1 | Tom Clegg | |
15 | 8 | Tom Clegg | <pre><code class="javascript"> |
16 | good: {"error":{"code":418,"text":"I'm a teapot"}} |
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17 | 1 | Tom Clegg | |
18 | 8 | Tom Clegg | bad: {"errorCode":418,"errorText":"I'm a teapot"} |
19 | </code></pre> |
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20 | 1 | Tom Clegg | |
21 | 8 | Tom Clegg | Clients must ignore any unrecognized keys they encounter in the payload. This allows the server to add features without breaking existing clients. |
22 | 1 | Tom Clegg | |
23 | 8 | Tom Clegg | h2. setAuth |
24 | 1 | Tom Clegg | |
25 | 8 | Tom Clegg | After establishing a connection, and before subscribing to any streams, the client must supply an authorization token. |
26 | 1 | Tom Clegg | |
27 | 8 | Tom Clegg | Successful authorization is acknowledged. |
28 | 1 | Tom Clegg | |
29 | 8 | Tom Clegg | <pre><code class="javascript"> |
30 | client: { |
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31 | "setAuth":{"token":"3kg6k6lzmp9kj5cpkcoxie963cmvjahbt2fod9zru30k1jqdmi"} |
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32 | } |
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33 | 1 | Tom Clegg | |
34 | 8 | Tom Clegg | server: { |
35 | "auth":{"uuid":"zzzzz-gj3su-077z32aux8dg2s1"} |
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36 | } |
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37 | </code></pre> |
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38 | 1 | Tom Clegg | |
39 | 8 | Tom Clegg | Unsuccessful authorization results in an error. |
40 | 1 | Tom Clegg | |
41 | 8 | Tom Clegg | <pre><code class="javascript"> |
42 | client: { |
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43 | "setAuth":{ |
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44 | "token":"xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx"}} |
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45 | 6 | Peter Amstutz | |
46 | 8 | Tom Clegg | server: { |
47 | "authError":{ |
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48 | "errorText":"invalid or expired token"}} |
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49 | </code></pre> |
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50 | 1 | Tom Clegg | |
51 | 8 | Tom Clegg | h2. subscribe |
52 | 1 | Tom Clegg | |
53 | 8 | Tom Clegg | Subscribe to an event stream. |
54 | 1 | Tom Clegg | |
55 | 8 | Tom Clegg | If the given ETag does not match the current ETag, the server should send an update event right away: this means the client has already missed one or more updates since the version it has cached. |
56 | 1 | Tom Clegg | |
57 | 8 | Tom Clegg | <pre><code class="javascript"> |
58 | client: { |
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59 | "subscribe":{ |
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60 | "uuid":"zzzzz-4zz18-1g4g0vhpjn9wq7i", |
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61 | "etag":"9u32836jpz7i046sd84gu190h"}} |
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62 | 1 | Tom Clegg | |
63 | 8 | Tom Clegg | server: { |
64 | "event":{ |
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65 | "msgID":12345, |
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66 | "type":"update", |
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67 | "uuid":"zzzzz-4zz18-1g4g0vhpjn9wq7i", |
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68 | "etag":"1wfdizt65l5w597jf5lojf8jm"}} |
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69 | </code></pre> |
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70 | 1 | Tom Clegg | |
71 | 8 | Tom Clegg | When a client subscribes to a stream X, but is not authorized to read the object with UUID X (or there is no such object), the server sends an error message. This does not terminate the connection, nor does it affect any other streams. |
72 | 1 | Tom Clegg | |
73 | 8 | Tom Clegg | <pre><code class="javascript"> |
74 | client: { |
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75 | "subscribe":{ |
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76 | "uuid":"zzzzz-tpzed-000000000000000", |
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77 | "etag":"x"}} |
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78 | 1 | Tom Clegg | |
79 | 8 | Tom Clegg | server: { |
80 | "subscribeError":{ |
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81 | "uuid":"zzzzz-tpzed-000000000000000", |
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82 | "errorText":"forbidden"}} |
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83 | </code></pre> |
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84 | |||
85 | h2. Container and job logging events |
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86 | |||
87 | [[Events API]] → "Non-state-changing events" |
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88 | |||
89 | <pre><code class="javascript"> |
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90 | client: { |
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91 | "subscribe":{ |
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92 | "uuid":"zzzzz-dz642-logscontainer03", |
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93 | "etag":"2qtm62j6zb3nx5zud8b5v0ayl", |
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94 | "select":["logs.event_type","logs.properties.text"]}} |
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95 | |||
96 | server: { |
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97 | "event":{ |
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98 | "msgID":12346, |
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99 | "type":"log", |
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100 | "uuid":"zzzzz-dz642-logscontainer03", |
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101 | "etag":"2qtm62j6zb3nx5zud8b5v0ayl", |
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102 | "log":{ |
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103 | "event_type":"stderr", |
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104 | "properties":{ |
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105 | "text":"foo\n"}}}} |
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106 | </code></pre> |
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107 | |||
108 | h2. Update events |
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109 | |||
110 | 9 | Tom Clegg | <pre><code class="javascript"> |
111 | server: { |
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112 | "event":{ |
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113 | "msgID":12345, |
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114 | "type":"update", |
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115 | "uuid":"zzzzz-4zz18-1g4g0vhpjn9wq7i", |
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116 | "etag":"1wfdizt65l5w597jf5lojf8jm"}} |
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117 | </code></pre> |
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118 | |||
119 | 8 | Tom Clegg | h2. Create events |
120 | |||
121 | 9 | Tom Clegg | <pre><code class="javascript"> |
122 | server: { |
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123 | "event":{ |
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124 | "msgID":12345, |
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125 | "type":"create", |
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126 | "uuid":"zzzzz-4zz18-1g4g0vhpjn9wq7i", |
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127 | "etag":"1wfdizt65l5w597jf5lojf8jm"}} |
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128 | </code></pre> |
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129 | |||
130 | 8 | Tom Clegg | h2. Delete events |
131 | 9 | Tom Clegg | |
132 | <pre><code class="javascript"> |
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133 | server: { |
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134 | "event":{ |
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135 | "msgID":12345, |
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136 | "type":"delete", |
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137 | "uuid":"zzzzz-4zz18-1g4g0vhpjn9wq7i", |
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138 | "etag":"1wfdizt65l5w597jf5lojf8jm"}} |
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139 | </code></pre> |
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140 | |||
141 | The etag reflects the last state of the object before it was deleted. |
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142 | |||
143 | TBD: Should the etag be omitted instead? |
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144 | |||
145 | Note: The logs table (and the old websocket API) use(d) a different event type: "destroy". |
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146 | 8 | Tom Clegg | |
147 | h2. Missed events |
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148 | |||
149 | Zero or more events for a single stream have been skipped: |
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150 | |||
151 | <pre><code class="javascript"> |
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152 | server: { |
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153 | "eventsMissed":{ |
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154 | "msgID":12347, |
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155 | "uuid":"zzzzz-dz642-logscontainer03"}} |
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156 | </code></pre> |
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157 | |||
158 | Zero or more events on one or more of the subscribed streams have been skipped: |
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159 | |||
160 | <pre><code class="javascript"> |
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161 | server: { |
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162 | "eventsMissed":{ |
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163 | "msgID":12348}} |
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164 | </code></pre> |
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165 | |||
166 | h1. Server implementation |
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167 | |||
168 | h2. Architecture |
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169 | |||
170 | Go server with a goroutine serving each connection. |
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171 | |||
172 | One goroutine receives incoming events and assigns msgID numbers. |
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173 | |||
174 | Each connection has an outgoing event queue. Leave room for ability to resize a connection's outgoing queue dynamically, provided no subscriptions are active: this way privileged clients can request bigger queues. |
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175 | |||
176 | Common events should be serialized once and distributed to all connections. This avoids serializing each event N times, and allows outgoing queues to share a single message buffer for a given event. |
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177 | |||
178 | If practical, when a connection's outgoing queue fills up, send a "missed events" signal and discard all buffered events (and, of course, any incoming events that arrive while the buffer is full). After a "missed events" signal the client needs to assume its cache is out of date anyway. Expect a faster recovery from a temporary backlog if, when skipping events, we skip as many as we can. |
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179 | |||
180 | h2. Logging |
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181 | |||
182 | Print JSON-formatted log entries on stderr. |
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183 | |||
184 | Print a log entry when a client connects. |
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185 | |||
186 | Print a log entry when a client disconnects. Show counters for: |
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187 | * Number of streams (UUIDs) added while connection was up |
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188 | * Number of streams removed |
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189 | * Number of events sent |
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190 | * Number of bytes sent |
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191 | * Total time spent waiting for Write() to return (or a better way to measure congestion?) |
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192 | |||
193 | 2 | Tom Clegg | h2. Libraries |
194 | |||
195 | Websocket: |
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196 | * https://godoc.org/golang.org/x/net/websocket |
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197 | |||
198 | PostgreSQL: |
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199 | * https://godoc.org/github.com/lib/pq via https://godoc.org/database/sql |
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200 | 1 | Tom Clegg | * https://godoc.org/github.com/lib/pq#hdr-Notifications and https://godoc.org/github.com/lib/pq/listen_example |
201 | |||
202 | 8 | Tom Clegg | h1. Problems with old/current implementation |
203 | 3 | Tom Clegg | |
204 | 8 | Tom Clegg | (Lessons to avoid re-learning next time...) |
205 | 3 | Tom Clegg | |
206 | 8 | Tom Clegg | The Rails API server can function as a websocket server. Clients (notably Workbench, arv-mount, arv-ws) use it to listen for events without polling. |
207 | 4 | Tom Clegg | |
208 | 8 | Tom Clegg | Problems with current implementation: |
209 | * Unreliable. See #9427, #8277 |
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210 | * Resource-heavy (one postgres connection per connected client, uses lots of memory) |
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211 | * Logging is not very good |
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212 | * Updates look like database records instead of API responses (e.g., computed fields are missing, collection manifest_text has no signatures) |
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213 | * Offers an API for catching up on missed events after disconnecting/reconnecting, but this API (let alone the code) isn't enough to offer a "don't miss any events, don't send any events twice" guarantee. See #9388 |
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214 | |||
215 | #8460 |