Elegant WebSockets for your Flask apps.
Simple usage of route
decorator:
from flask import Flask
from flask_sockets import Sockets
app = Flask(__name__)
sockets = Sockets(app)
@sockets.route('/echo')
def echo_socket(ws):
while not ws.closed:
message = ws.receive()
ws.send(message)
@app.route('/')
def hello():
return 'Hello World!'
if __name__ == "__main__":
from gevent import pywsgi
from geventwebsocket.handler import WebSocketHandler
server = pywsgi.WSGIServer(('', 5000), app, handler_class=WebSocketHandler)
server.serve_forever()
Usage of Flask blueprints:
from flask import Flask, Blueprint
from flask_sockets import Sockets
html = Blueprint(r'html', __name__)
ws = Blueprint(r'ws', __name__)
@html.route('/')
def hello():
return 'Hello World!'
@ws.route('/echo')
def echo_socket(socket):
while not socket.closed:
message = socket.receive()
socket.send(message)
app = Flask(__name__)
sockets = Sockets(app)
app.register_blueprint(html, url_prefix=r'/')
sockets.register_blueprint(ws, url_prefix=r'/')
if __name__ == "__main__":
from gevent import pywsgi
from geventwebsocket.handler import WebSocketHandler
server = pywsgi.WSGIServer(('', 5000), app, handler_class=WebSocketHandler)
server.serve_forever()
Combining WebSockets with Ajax (XHR) endpoints also comes handy with the support of session handling built-in to sockets as well. As an example you could use an Ajax login call which would create a new session and accordingly set a secure HttpOnly cookie to the browser. After authorization, you can connect to the WebSocket endpoint and reuse the session handling from Flask there as well (as shown here: https://pythonhosted.org/Flask-Session/). Access to other custom cookies is also possible via Flasks request.cookies
property.
Serving WebSockets in Python was really difficult. Now it's not.
To install Flask-Sockets, simply:
$ pip install Flask-Sockets
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 and gevent-websocket.
The given example can run standalone as main.
Anything that inserts wsgi.websocket
into the WSGI environ is
supported, but gevent-websocket is recommended.
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.
The websocket interface that is passed into your routes is
provided by gevent-websocket.
The basic methods are fairly straightforward —
send
, receive
, send_frame
, and close
.
- Add support of Flask blueprints.
- Add request context into the socket handler.
- Fallback to Flask logic if websocket environment is not available.
- Use Flask routing to allow for variables in URL
- Initial release.