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Monthly Downloads: 36
Programming language: Haskell
License: MIT License
Tags: Web     Database     PostgreSQL    
Latest version: v0.11.2.0

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README

postgres-websockets

CI

postgres-websockets is a middleware that adds websockets capabilites on top of PostgreSQL's asynchronous notifications using LISTEN and NOTIFY commands. The project was largely inspired and originally designed for use with PostgREST.

postgres-websockets allows you to:

  • Open websockets with multiple channels and exchange messages with the database asynchronously.
  • Send messages to that websocket, so they become a NOTIFY command in a PostgreSQL database.
  • Receive messages sent to any database channel though a websocket.
  • Authorize the use of channels using a JWT issued by another service or by another PostgREST endpoint.
  • Authorize read-only, write-only, or read and write websockets.

Running the server

Quickstart using docker-compose

The docker-compose.yml present in the repository will start a PostgreSQL database alongside a postgres-websockets and a pg-recorder. To try it out, you will need Docker installed and git to clone this repository.

git clone https://github.com/diogob/postgres-websockets.git
cd postgres-websockets
docker-compose up

Pre-compiled binaries

You can download binaries from the releases page. Currently, only Linux binaries complied against Ubuntu on amd64 are provided.

Building from source

To build the project, I recommend the use of Stack. You also need to have git installed to download the source code. Having installed stack the following commands should install postgres-websockets into your ~/.local/bin directory:

git clone https://github.com/diogob/postgres-websockets.git
cd postgres-websockets
stack setup
stack build

If you have any problems processing any Postgres related library on a Mac, try installing Postgres.app.

After the build, you should be able to run the server using ~/.local/bin/postgres-websockets (you can add ~/.local/bin to your PATH variable):

To run the example below you will need a PostgreSQL server running on port 5432 of your localhost.

PGWS_DB_URI="postgres://localhost:5432/postgres" PGWS_JWT_SECRET="auwhfdnskjhewfi34uwehdlaehsfkuaeiskjnfduierhfsiweskjcnzeiluwhskdewishdnpwe" ~/.local/bin/postgres-websockets
postgres-websockets <version> / Connects websockets to PostgreSQL asynchronous notifications.
Listening on port 3000

You can also use the provided [sample-env](./sample-env) file to export the needed variables:

source sample-env && ~/.local/bin/postgres-websockets

After running the above command, open your browser on http://localhost:3000 to see an example of usage.

The sample config file provided in the sample-env file comes with a jwt secret just for testing and is used in the sample client. Note that the sample-env points to ./database-uri.txt to load the URI from an external file. This is determined by the use of @ as a prefix to the value of the variable PGWS_DB_URI. This is entirely optional and the URI could be exported directly as PGWS_DB_URI without using the prefix @. You will find the complete sources for the example under the folder client-example. To run the server without giving access to any static files, one can unset the variable PGWS_ROOT_PATH.

Opening connections

To open a websocket connection to the server, there are two possible request formats:

  1. Requesting a channel and giving a token

When you request access to a channel called chat the address of the websockets will look like:

ws://chat/eyJhbGciOiJIUzI1NiIsInR5cCI6IkpXVCJ9.eyJtb2RlIjoicncifQ.QKGnMJe41OFZcjz_qQSplmWAmVd_hmVjijKUNoJYpis

When the token contains a channels claim, the value of that claim should be a list of allowed channels. Any requested channel not set in that claim will result in an error opening the connection. Tokens without the channels claim (like the example above) are capable of opening connections to any channel, so be careful when issuing those.

  1. Giving only the token

When you inform only the token on the websocket address, the channels claim must be present. In this case, all channels present in the claim will be available simultaneously in the same connection. This is useful for clients that need to monitor or broadcast a set of channels, being more convenient than managing multiple websockets. The address will look like:

ws://eyJhbGciOiJIUzI1NiIsInR5cCI6IkpXVCJ9.eyJtb2RlIjoicnciLCJjaGFubmVsIjoiY2hhdCJ9.fEm6P7GHeJWZG8OtZhv3H0JdqPljE5dainvsoupM9pA

To use a secure socket (wss://) you can set the configuration variables PGWS_CERTIFICATE_FILE and PGWS_KEY_FILE. Once these two variables point to a valid X.509 certificate, the server will enable TLS connections. Below a quick example of how to generate a self-signed certificate using OpenSSL command line tool:

openssl genrsa -out key.pem 2048
openssl req -new -key key.pem -out certificate.csr
openssl x509 -req -in certificate.csr -signkey key.pem -out certificate.pem

Receiving messages from the browser

Every message received from the browser will be in JSON format as:

{
  "event": "WebsocketMessage",
  "channel": "destination_channel",
  "payload": "message content",
  "claims": { "message_delivered_at": 0.0, "a_custom_claim_from_the_jwt": "your_custom_value" }
}

Where claims contain any custom claims added to the JWT with the added message_delivered_at which marks the timestamp in UNIX format of when the message was processed by postgres-websockets just before being sent to the database. Also, channel contains the channel used to send the message, this should be used to send any messages back to that particular client. Finally, payload contain a string with the message contents.

A easy way to process messages received asynchronously is to use pg-recorder with some custom stored procedures. For more options on notification processing, check the PostgREST documentation on the topic.

Sending messages to the browser

To send a message to a particular channel on the browser, one should notify the postgres-websockets listener channel and pass a JSON object containing the channel and payload such as:

SELECT pg_notify(
  'postgres-websockets-listener',
  json_build_object('event', 'WebsocketMessage', 'channel', 'chat', 'payload', 'test')::text
);

Where postgres-websockets-listener is the database channel used by your instance of postgres-websockets and chat is the channel where the browser is connected (the same issued in the JWT used to connect).

Monitoring Connections

To monitor connection opening one should set the variable PGWS_META_CHANNEL which will enable the meta-data messages generation in the server on the channel name specified. For instamce, if we use the configuration in the [sample-env](./sample-env) we will see messages like the one below each time a connection is established (only after the JWT is validated).

{"event":"ConnectionOpen","channel":"server-info","payload":"server-info","claims":{"mode":"rw","message_delivered_at":1.602719440727465893e9}}

You can monitor these messages on another websocket connection with a proper read token for the channel server-info or also having an additional database listener on the PGWS_LISTEN_CHANNEL.

Recovering from listener database connection failures

The database connection used to wait for notification where the LISTEN command is issued can cause problems when it fails. To prevent this problem from completely disrupting our websockets server, there are two ways to configure postgres-websockets:

  • Self healing connection - postgres-websockets comes with a connection supervisor baked in. You just need to set the configuration PGWS_CHECK_LISTENER_INTERVAL to a number of milliseconds that will be the maximum amount of time losing messages. There is a cost for this since at each interval an additional SELECT query will be issued to ensure the listener connection is still active. If the connection is not found, the connection thread will be killed and respawned. This method has the advantage of keeping all channels and websocket connections alive while the database connection is severed (although messages will be lost).
  • Using external supervision - you can also unset PGWS_CHECK_LISTENER_INTERVAL and postgres-websockets will try to shut down the server when the database connection is lost. This does not seem to work in 100% of the cases, since in theory it's possible to have the database connection closed and the producer thread lingering. But in most cases it should work, and some external process can then restart the server. The downside is that all websocket connections will be lost.