alexv-smirnov 0e578a4c44 Change "ya.make" | 11 months ago | |
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.dist-info | 11 months ago | |
tests | 11 months ago | |
websocket | 11 months ago | |
COPYING.LESSER | 11 months ago | |
LICENSE | 11 months ago | |
README.md | 11 months ago | |
ya.make | 11 months ago |
websocket-client is a WebSocket client for Python. It provides access to low level APIs for WebSockets. websocket-client implements version hybi-13 of the WebSocket procotol. This client does not currently support the permessage-deflate extension from RFC 7692.
This project's documentation can be found at https://websocket-client.readthedocs.io/
Please see the contribution guidelines
First, install the following dependencies:
You can install the dependencies with the command pip install six
and
pip install backports.ssl_match_hostname
You can use either python setup.py install
or pip install websocket-client
to install. This module is tested on Python 2.7 and Python 3.4+. Python 3
support was first introduced in version 0.14.0, but is a work in progress.
Check out the documentation's FAQ for additional guidelines: https://websocket-client.readthedocs.io/en/latest/faq.html
Known issues with this library include lack of WebSocket Compression support (RFC 7692) and minimal threading documentation/support.
The send
and validate_utf8
methods are very slow in pure Python. You can
disable UTF8 validation in this library (and receive a performance enhancement)
with the skip_utf8_validation
parameter. If you want to get better
performance, please install both numpy and wsaccel, and import them into your
project files - these other libraries will automatically be used when available.
Note that wsaccel can sometimes cause other issues.
Most real-world WebSockets situations involve longer-lived connections.
The WebSocketApp run_forever
loop automatically tries to reconnect when a
connection is lost, and provides a variety of event-based connection controls.
The project documentation has
additional examples
import websocket
try:
import thread
except ImportError:
import _thread as thread
import time
def on_message(ws, message):
print(message)
def on_error(ws, error):
print(error)
def on_close(ws):
print("### closed ###")
def on_open(ws):
def run(*args):
for i in range(3):
time.sleep(1)
ws.send("Hello %d" % i)
time.sleep(1)
ws.close()
print("thread terminating...")
thread.start_new_thread(run, ())
if __name__ == "__main__":
websocket.enableTrace(True)
ws = websocket.WebSocketApp("ws://echo.websocket.org/",
on_open = on_open,
on_message = on_message,
on_error = on_error,
on_close = on_close)
ws.run_forever()
This is if you want to communicate a short message and disconnect immediately when done. For example, if you want to confirm that a WebSocket server is running and responds properly to a specific request. The project documentation has additional examples
from websocket import create_connection
ws = create_connection("ws://echo.websocket.org/")
print("Sending 'Hello, World'...")
ws.send("Hello, World")
print("Sent")
print("Receiving...")
result = ws.recv()
print("Received '%s'" % result)
ws.close()
If you want to customize socket options, set sockopt, as seen below:
from websocket import create_connection
ws = create_connection("ws://echo.websocket.org/",
sockopt=((socket.IPPROTO_TCP, socket.TCP_NODELAY),))
Thanks to @battlemidget and @ralphbean for helping migrate this project to Python 3.