mirror of
https://github.com/kennethreitz/flask-sockets.git
synced 2026-06-05 23:10:16 +00:00
6feac2a9b7d00a61fc43e34c20c7bb467e809e73
Flask-Sockets
=============
Elegant WebSockets for your Flask apps.
.. image:: http://farm4.staticflickr.com/3689/9755961864_577e32a106_c.jpg
.. code-block:: python
from flask import Flask
from flask_sockets import Sockets
app = Flask(__name__)
sockets = Sockets(app)
@sockets.route('/echo')
def echo_socket(ws):
while True:
message = ws.receive()
ws.send(message)
@app.route('/')
def hello():
return 'Hello World!'
Serving WebSockets in Python was really difficult. Now it's not.
Installation
------------
To install Flask-Sockets, simply::
$ pip install Flask-Sockets
Deployment
----------
A custom Gunicorn worker is included to make deployment as friendly as possible::
$ gunicorn -k flask_sockets.worker hello:app
Production services are provided by `gevent <http://www.gevent.org>`_
and `gevent-websocket <http://www.gelens.org/code/gevent-websocket/>`_.
Anything that inserts ``wsgi.websocket`` into the WSGI environ is
supported, but gevent-websocket is recommended.
Development / Testing
---------------------
Because the Werkzeug development server cannot provide the WSGI environ with
a websocket interface, it is not possible to run a Flask app using the standard
``app.run()``.
If you try to, Flask will still try to serve on all the specified routes, and
throw a ``KeyError`` whenever a client tries to connect to a websocket route.
Instead, just use the included gunicorn worker (explained above), or anything that
can insert ``wsgi.websocket`` into the WSGI environ.
WebSocket Interface
-------------------
The websocket interface that is passed into your routes is
`provided by gevent-websocket <https://bitbucket.org/noppo/gevent-websocket>`_.
The basic methods are fairly straitforward —
``send``, ``receive``, ``send_frame``, and ``close``.
Hopefully, more documentation will be available soon.
Languages
Python
100%