Installations
npm install sockjs-client
Developer
sockjs
Developer Guide
Module System
CommonJS, UMD
Min. Node Version
>=12
Typescript Support
No
Node Version
12.22.10
NPM Version
8.5.2
Statistics
8,448 Stars
987 Commits
1,295 Forks
279 Watching
10 Branches
60 Contributors
Updated on 27 Nov 2024
Languages
JavaScript (90.54%)
HTML (9.41%)
Shell (0.05%)
Total Downloads
Cumulative downloads
Total Downloads
2,172,676,301
Last day
-9.4%
686,885
Compared to previous day
Last week
1.6%
3,744,161
Compared to previous week
Last month
16.8%
15,263,285
Compared to previous month
Last year
-32.6%
178,795,132
Compared to previous year
Daily Downloads
Weekly Downloads
Monthly Downloads
Yearly Downloads
Dependencies
5
SockJS-client
SockJS for enterprise
Available as part of the Tidelift Subscription.
The maintainers of SockJS and thousands of other packages are working with Tidelift to deliver commercial support and maintenance for the open source dependencies you use to build your applications. Save time, reduce risk, and improve code health, while paying the maintainers of the exact dependencies you use. Learn more.
Summary
SockJS is a browser JavaScript library that provides a WebSocket-like object. SockJS gives you a coherent, cross-browser, Javascript API which creates a low latency, full duplex, cross-domain communication channel between the browser and the web server.
Under the hood SockJS tries to use native WebSockets first. If that fails it can use a variety of browser-specific transport protocols and presents them through WebSocket-like abstractions.
SockJS is intended to work for all modern browsers and in environments which don't support the WebSocket protocol -- for example, behind restrictive corporate proxies.
SockJS-client does require a server counterpart:
- SockJS-node is a SockJS server for Node.js.
Philosophy:
- The API should follow HTML5 Websockets API as closely as possible.
- All the transports must support cross domain connections out of the box. It's possible and recommended to host a SockJS server on a different server than your main web site.
- There is support for at least one streaming protocol for every major browser.
- Streaming transports should work cross-domain and should support cookies (for cookie-based sticky sessions).
- Polling transports are used as a fallback for old browsers and hosts behind restrictive proxies.
- Connection establishment should be fast and lightweight.
- No Flash inside (no need to open port 843 - which doesn't work through proxies, no need to host 'crossdomain.xml', no need to wait for 3 seconds in order to detect problems)
Subscribe to SockJS mailing list for discussions and support.
SockJS family
- SockJS-client JavaScript client library
- SockJS-node Node.js server
- SockJS-erlang Erlang server
- SockJS-cyclone Python/Cyclone/Twisted server
- SockJS-tornado Python/Tornado server
- SockJS-twisted Python/Twisted server
- SockJS-aiohttp Python/Aiohttp server
- Spring Framework Java client & server
- vert.x Java/vert.x server
- Xitrum Scala server
- Atmosphere Framework JavaEE Server, Play Framework, Netty, Vert.x
- Actix SockJS Rust Server, Actix Framework
Work in progress:
- SockJS-ruby
- SockJS-netty
- SockJS-gevent (SockJS-gevent fork)
- pyramid-SockJS
- wildcloud-websockets
- wai-SockJS
- SockJS-perl
- SockJS-go
- syp.biz.SockJS.NET - .NET port of the SockJS client
Getting Started
SockJS mimics the WebSockets API,
but instead of WebSocket
there is a SockJS
Javascript object.
First, you need to load the SockJS JavaScript library. For example, you can put that in your HTML head:
1<script src="https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/npm/sockjs-client@1/dist/sockjs.min.js"></script>
After the script is loaded you can establish a connection with the SockJS server. Here's a simple example:
1 var sock = new SockJS('https://mydomain.com/my_prefix'); 2 sock.onopen = function() { 3 console.log('open'); 4 sock.send('test'); 5 }; 6 7 sock.onmessage = function(e) { 8 console.log('message', e.data); 9 sock.close(); 10 }; 11 12 sock.onclose = function() { 13 console.log('close'); 14 }; 15
SockJS-client API
SockJS class
Similar to the 'WebSocket' API, the 'SockJS' constructor takes one or more arguments:
1var sockjs = new SockJS(url, _reserved, options);
url
may contain a query string, if one is desired.
Where options
is a hash which can contain:
-
server (string)
String to append to url for actual data connection. Defaults to a random 4 digit number.
-
transports (string OR array of strings)
Sometimes it is useful to disable some fallback transports. This option allows you to supply a list transports that may be used by SockJS. By default all available transports will be used.
-
sessionId (number OR function)
Both client and server use session identifiers to distinguish connections. If you specify this option as a number, SockJS will use its random string generator function to generate session ids that are N-character long (where N corresponds to the number specified by sessionId). When you specify this option as a function, the function must return a randomly generated string. Every time SockJS needs to generate a session id it will call this function and use the returned string directly. If you don't specify this option, the default is to use the default random string generator to generate 8-character long session ids.
-
timeout (number)
Specify a minimum timeout in milliseconds to use for the transport connections. By default this is dynamically calculated based on the measured RTT and the number of expected round trips. This setting will establish a minimum, but if the calculated timeout is higher, that will be used.
Although the 'SockJS' object tries to emulate the 'WebSocket' behaviour, it's impossible to support all of its features. An important SockJS limitation is the fact that you're not allowed to open more than one SockJS connection to a single domain at a time. This limitation is caused by an in-browser limit of outgoing connections - usually browsers don't allow opening more than two outgoing connections to a single domain. A single SockJS session requires those two connections - one for downloading data, the other for sending messages. Opening a second SockJS session at the same time would most likely block, and can result in both sessions timing out.
Opening more than one SockJS connection at a time is generally a bad practice. If you absolutely must do it, you can use multiple subdomains, using a different subdomain for every SockJS connection.
Supported transports, by browser (html served from http:// or https://)
Browser | Websockets | Streaming | Polling |
---|---|---|---|
IE 6, 7 | no | no | jsonp-polling |
IE 8, 9 (cookies=no) | no | xdr-streaming †| xdr-polling †|
IE 8, 9 (cookies=yes) | no | iframe-htmlfile | iframe-xhr-polling |
IE 10 | rfc6455 | xhr-streaming | xhr-polling |
Chrome 6-13 | hixie-76 | xhr-streaming | xhr-polling |
Chrome 14+ | hybi-10 / rfc6455 | xhr-streaming | xhr-polling |
Firefox <10 | no ‡ | xhr-streaming | xhr-polling |
Firefox 10+ | hybi-10 / rfc6455 | xhr-streaming | xhr-polling |
Safari 5.x | hixie-76 | xhr-streaming | xhr-polling |
Safari 6+ | rfc6455 | xhr-streaming | xhr-polling |
Opera 10.70+ | no ‡ | iframe-eventsource | iframe-xhr-polling |
Opera 12.10+ | rfc6455 | xhr-streaming | xhr-polling |
Konqueror | no | no | jsonp-polling |
-
†: IE 8+ supports [XDomainRequest]1, which is essentially a modified AJAX/XHR that can do requests across domains. But unfortunately it doesn't send any cookies, which makes it inappropriate for deployments when the load balancer uses JSESSIONID cookie to do sticky sessions.
-
‡: Firefox 4.0 and Opera 11.00 and shipped with disabled Websockets "hixie-76". They can still be enabled by manually changing a browser setting.
Supported transports, by browser (html served from file://)
Sometimes you may want to serve your html from "file://" address - for development or if you're using PhoneGap or similar technologies. But due to the Cross Origin Policy files served from "file://" have no Origin, and that means some of SockJS transports won't work. For this reason the SockJS transport table is different than usually, major differences are:
Browser | Websockets | Streaming | Polling |
---|---|---|---|
IE 8, 9 | same as above | iframe-htmlfile | iframe-xhr-polling |
Other | same as above | iframe-eventsource | iframe-xhr-polling |
Supported transports, by name
Transport | References |
---|---|
websocket (rfc6455) | [rfc 6455]2 |
websocket (hixie-76) | [draft-hixie-thewebsocketprotocol-76]3 |
websocket (hybi-10) | [draft-ietf-hybi-thewebsocketprotocol-10]4 |
xhr-streaming | Transport using [Cross domain XHR]5 [streaming]6 capability (readyState=3). |
xdr-streaming | Transport using [XDomainRequest]1 [streaming]6 capability (readyState=3). |
eventsource | [EventSource/Server-sent events]7. |
iframe-eventsource | [EventSource/Server-sent events]7 used from an [iframe via postMessage]8. |
htmlfile | [HtmlFile]9. |
iframe-htmlfile | [HtmlFile]9 used from an [iframe via postMessage]8. |
xhr-polling | Long-polling using [cross domain XHR]5. |
xdr-polling | Long-polling using [XDomainRequest]1. |
iframe-xhr-polling | Long-polling using normal AJAX from an [iframe via postMessage]8. |
jsonp-polling | Slow and old fashioned [JSONP polling]10. This transport will show "busy indicator" (aka: "spinning wheel") when sending data. |
Connecting to SockJS without the client
Although the main point of SockJS is to enable browser-to-server connectivity, it is possible to connect to SockJS from an external application. Any SockJS server complying with 0.3 protocol does support a raw WebSocket url. The raw WebSocket url for the test server looks like:
- ws://localhost:8081/echo/websocket
You can connect any WebSocket RFC 6455 compliant WebSocket client to this url. This can be a command line client, external application, third party code or even a browser (though I don't know why you would want to do so).
Deployment
You should use a version of sockjs-client that supports the protocol used by your server. For example:
1<script src="https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/npm/sockjs-client@1/dist/sockjs.min.js"></script>
For server-side deployment tricks, especially about load balancing and session stickiness, take a look at the SockJS-node readme.
Development and testing
SockJS-client needs node.js for running a test server and JavaScript minification. If you want to work on SockJS-client source code, checkout the git repo and follow these steps:
cd sockjs-client
npm install
To generate JavaScript, run:
gulp browserify
To generate minified JavaScript, run:
gulp browserify:min
Both commands output into the build
directory.
Testing
Automated testing provided by:
Once you've compiled the SockJS-client you may want to check if your changes pass all the tests.
npm run test:browser_local
This will start karma and a test support server.
Browser Quirks
There are various browser quirks which we don't intend to address:
- Pressing ESC in Firefox, before Firefox 20, closes the SockJS connection. For a workaround and discussion see #18.
jsonp-polling
transport will show a "spinning wheel" (aka. "busy indicator") when sending data.- You can't open more than one SockJS connection to one domain at the same time due to the browser's limit of concurrent connections (this limit is not counting native WebSocket connections).
- Although SockJS is trying to escape any strange Unicode characters (even invalid ones - like surrogates \xD800-\xDBFF or \xFFFE and \xFFFF) it's advisable to use only valid characters. Using invalid characters is a bit slower, and may not work with SockJS servers that have proper Unicode support.
- Having a global function called
onmessage
or such is probably a bad idea, as it could be called by the built-inpostMessage
API. - From SockJS' point of view there is nothing special about SSL/HTTPS. Connecting between unencrypted and encrypted sites should work just fine.
- Although SockJS does its best to support both prefix and cookie based sticky sessions, the latter may not work well cross-domain with browsers that don't accept third-party cookies by default (Safari). In order to get around this make sure you're connecting to SockJS from the same parent domain as the main site. For example 'sockjs.a.com' is able to set cookies if you're connecting from 'www.a.com' or 'a.com'.
- Trying to connect from secure "https://" to insecure "http://" is not a good idea. The other way around should be fine.
- Long polling is known to cause problems on Heroku, but a workaround for SockJS is available.
- SockJS websocket transport is more stable over SSL. If you're a serious SockJS user then consider using SSL (more info).
Footnotes
-
https://blogs.msdn.microsoft.com/ieinternals/2010/05/13/xdomainrequest-restrictions-limitations-and-workarounds/ ↩ ↩2 ↩3
-
https://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-hixie-thewebsocketprotocol-76 ↩
-
https://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-ietf-hybi-thewebsocketprotocol-10 ↩
-
https://secure.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/wiki/XMLHttpRequest#Cross-domain_requests ↩ ↩2
-
https://html.spec.whatwg.org/multipage/comms.html#server-sent-events ↩ ↩2
-
https://developer.mozilla.org/en/DOM/window.postMessage ↩ ↩2 ↩3
-
http://cometdaily.com/2007/11/18/ie-activexhtmlfile-transport-part-ii/ ↩ ↩2
No vulnerabilities found.
Reason
no dangerous workflow patterns detected
Reason
no binaries found in the repo
Reason
license file detected
Details
- Info: project has a license file: LICENSE:0
- Info: FSF or OSI recognized license: MIT License: LICENSE:0
Reason
security policy file detected
Details
- Info: security policy file detected: github.com/sockjs/.github/SECURITY.md:1
- Info: Found linked content: github.com/sockjs/.github/SECURITY.md:1
- Warn: One or no descriptive hints of disclosure, vulnerability, and/or timelines in security policy
- Info: Found text in security policy: github.com/sockjs/.github/SECURITY.md:1
Reason
2 existing vulnerabilities detected
Details
- Warn: Project is vulnerable to: GHSA-3xgq-45jj-v275
- Warn: Project is vulnerable to: GHSA-35jh-r3h4-6jhm
Reason
Found 8/11 approved changesets -- score normalized to 7
Reason
5 commit(s) and 0 issue activity found in the last 90 days -- score normalized to 4
Reason
detected GitHub workflow tokens with excessive permissions
Details
- Warn: no topLevel permission defined: .github/workflows/stale.yml:1
- Info: no jobLevel write permissions found
Reason
dependency not pinned by hash detected -- score normalized to 0
Details
- Warn: GitHub-owned GitHubAction not pinned by hash: .github/workflows/stale.yml:13: update your workflow using https://app.stepsecurity.io/secureworkflow/sockjs/sockjs-client/stale.yml/main?enable=pin
- Info: 0 out of 1 GitHub-owned GitHubAction dependencies pinned
Reason
no effort to earn an OpenSSF best practices badge detected
Reason
project is not fuzzed
Details
- Warn: no fuzzer integrations found
Reason
branch protection not enabled on development/release branches
Details
- Warn: branch protection not enabled for branch 'main'
Reason
SAST tool is not run on all commits -- score normalized to 0
Details
- Warn: 0 commits out of 27 are checked with a SAST tool
Score
4.8
/10
Last Scanned on 2024-11-25
The Open Source Security Foundation is a cross-industry collaboration to improve the security of open source software (OSS). The Scorecard provides security health metrics for open source projects.
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