2 * libwebsockets - small server side websockets and web server implementation
4 * Copyright (C) 2010 Andy Green <andy@warmcat.com>
6 * This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
7 * modify it under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public
8 * License as published by the Free Software Foundation:
9 * version 2.1 of the License.
11 * This library is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
12 * but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
13 * MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU
14 * Lesser General Public License for more details.
16 * You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser General Public
17 * License along with this library; if not, write to the Free Software
18 * Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, Boston,
22 #ifndef __LIBWEBSOCKET_H__
23 #define __LIBWEBSOCKET_H__
32 #ifndef WIN32_LEAN_AND_MEAN
33 #define WIN32_LEAN_AND_MEAN
38 #include "../win32port/win32helpers/websock-w32.h"
40 #include "../win32port/win32helpers/gettimeofday.h"
42 #define strcasecmp stricmp
43 #define getdtablesize() 30000
49 #define LWS_EXTERN extern __declspec(dllexport)
51 #define LWS_EXTERN extern __declspec(dllimport)
63 #define LWS_EXTERN extern
66 #define CONTEXT_PORT_NO_LISTEN 0
67 #define MAX_MUX_RECURSION 2
80 LLL_COUNT = 9 /* set to count of valid flags */
83 extern void _lws_log(int filter, const char *format, ...);
85 /* warn and log are always compiled in */
86 #define lwsl_notice(...) _lws_log(LLL_NOTICE, __VA_ARGS__)
87 #define lwsl_warn(...) _lws_log(LLL_WARN, __VA_ARGS__)
88 #define lwsl_err(...) _lws_log(LLL_ERR, __VA_ARGS__)
91 * weaker logging can be deselected at configure time using disable_debug
92 * that gets rid of the overhead of checking while keeping _warn and _err
96 #define lwsl_info(...) _lws_log(LLL_INFO, __VA_ARGS__)
97 #define lwsl_debug(...) _lws_log(LLL_DEBUG, __VA_ARGS__)
98 #define lwsl_parser(...) _lws_log(LLL_PARSER, __VA_ARGS__)
99 #define lwsl_header(...) _lws_log(LLL_HEADER, __VA_ARGS__)
100 #define lwsl_ext(...) _lws_log(LLL_HEADER, __VA_ARGS__)
101 #define lwsl_client(...) _lws_log(LLL_CLIENT, __VA_ARGS__)
102 extern void lwsl_hexdump(void *buf, size_t len);
104 #define lwsl_info(...)
105 #define lwsl_debug(...)
106 #define lwsl_parser(...)
107 #define lwsl_header(...)
108 #define lwsl_ext(...)
109 #define lwsl_client(...)
110 #define lwsl_hexdump(a, b)
113 enum libwebsocket_context_options {
114 LWS_SERVER_OPTION_DEFEAT_CLIENT_MASK = 1,
115 LWS_SERVER_OPTION_REQUIRE_VALID_OPENSSL_CLIENT_CERT = 2,
116 LWS_SERVER_OPTION_SKIP_SERVER_CANONICAL_NAME = 4,
119 enum libwebsocket_callback_reasons {
120 LWS_CALLBACK_ESTABLISHED,
121 LWS_CALLBACK_CLIENT_CONNECTION_ERROR,
122 LWS_CALLBACK_CLIENT_ESTABLISHED,
124 LWS_CALLBACK_RECEIVE,
125 LWS_CALLBACK_CLIENT_RECEIVE,
126 LWS_CALLBACK_CLIENT_RECEIVE_PONG,
127 LWS_CALLBACK_CLIENT_WRITEABLE,
128 LWS_CALLBACK_SERVER_WRITEABLE,
130 LWS_CALLBACK_HTTP_FILE_COMPLETION,
131 LWS_CALLBACK_BROADCAST,
132 LWS_CALLBACK_FILTER_NETWORK_CONNECTION,
133 LWS_CALLBACK_FILTER_PROTOCOL_CONNECTION,
134 LWS_CALLBACK_OPENSSL_LOAD_EXTRA_CLIENT_VERIFY_CERTS,
135 LWS_CALLBACK_OPENSSL_LOAD_EXTRA_SERVER_VERIFY_CERTS,
136 LWS_CALLBACK_OPENSSL_PERFORM_CLIENT_CERT_VERIFICATION,
137 LWS_CALLBACK_CLIENT_APPEND_HANDSHAKE_HEADER,
138 LWS_CALLBACK_CONFIRM_EXTENSION_OKAY,
139 LWS_CALLBACK_CLIENT_CONFIRM_EXTENSION_SUPPORTED,
140 /* external poll() management support */
141 LWS_CALLBACK_ADD_POLL_FD,
142 LWS_CALLBACK_DEL_POLL_FD,
143 LWS_CALLBACK_SET_MODE_POLL_FD,
144 LWS_CALLBACK_CLEAR_MODE_POLL_FD,
147 #ifndef LWS_NO_EXTENSIONS
148 enum libwebsocket_extension_callback_reasons {
149 LWS_EXT_CALLBACK_SERVER_CONTEXT_CONSTRUCT,
150 LWS_EXT_CALLBACK_CLIENT_CONTEXT_CONSTRUCT,
151 LWS_EXT_CALLBACK_SERVER_CONTEXT_DESTRUCT,
152 LWS_EXT_CALLBACK_CLIENT_CONTEXT_DESTRUCT,
153 LWS_EXT_CALLBACK_CONSTRUCT,
154 LWS_EXT_CALLBACK_CLIENT_CONSTRUCT,
155 LWS_EXT_CALLBACK_CHECK_OK_TO_REALLY_CLOSE,
156 LWS_EXT_CALLBACK_CHECK_OK_TO_PROPOSE_EXTENSION,
157 LWS_EXT_CALLBACK_DESTROY,
158 LWS_EXT_CALLBACK_DESTROY_ANY_WSI_CLOSING,
159 LWS_EXT_CALLBACK_ANY_WSI_ESTABLISHED,
160 LWS_EXT_CALLBACK_PACKET_RX_PREPARSE,
161 LWS_EXT_CALLBACK_PACKET_TX_PRESEND,
162 LWS_EXT_CALLBACK_PACKET_TX_DO_SEND,
163 LWS_EXT_CALLBACK_HANDSHAKE_REPLY_TX,
164 LWS_EXT_CALLBACK_FLUSH_PENDING_TX,
165 LWS_EXT_CALLBACK_EXTENDED_PAYLOAD_RX,
166 LWS_EXT_CALLBACK_CAN_PROXY_CLIENT_CONNECTION,
167 LWS_EXT_CALLBACK_1HZ,
168 LWS_EXT_CALLBACK_REQUEST_ON_WRITEABLE,
169 LWS_EXT_CALLBACK_IS_WRITEABLE,
170 LWS_EXT_CALLBACK_PAYLOAD_TX,
171 LWS_EXT_CALLBACK_PAYLOAD_RX,
175 enum libwebsocket_write_protocol {
178 LWS_WRITE_CONTINUATION,
181 /* special 04+ opcodes */
189 LWS_WRITE_NO_FIN = 0x40,
191 * client packet payload goes out on wire unmunged
192 * only useful for security tests since normal servers cannot
193 * decode the content if used
195 LWS_WRITE_CLIENT_IGNORE_XOR_MASK = 0x80
199 * you need these to look at headers that have been parsed if using the
200 * LWS_CALLBACK_FILTER_CONNECTION callback. If a header from the enum
201 * list below is absent, .token = NULL and token_len = 0. Otherwise .token
202 * points to .token_len chars containing that header content.
210 enum lws_token_indexes {
213 WSI_TOKEN_CONNECTION,
228 WSI_TOKEN_EXTENSIONS,
230 /* client receives these */
236 /* always last real token index*/
238 /* parser state additions */
241 WSI_TOKEN_SKIPPING_SAW_CR,
242 WSI_PARSING_COMPLETE,
243 WSI_INIT_TOKEN_MUXURL,
250 1000 indicates a normal closure, meaning that the purpose for
251 which the connection was established has been fulfilled.
255 1001 indicates that an endpoint is "going away", such as a server
256 going down or a browser having navigated away from a page.
260 1002 indicates that an endpoint is terminating the connection due
265 1003 indicates that an endpoint is terminating the connection
266 because it has received a type of data it cannot accept (e.g., an
267 endpoint that understands only text data MAY send this if it
268 receives a binary message).
272 Reserved. The specific meaning might be defined in the future.
276 1005 is a reserved value and MUST NOT be set as a status code in a
277 Close control frame by an endpoint. It is designated for use in
278 applications expecting a status code to indicate that no status
279 code was actually present.
283 1006 is a reserved value and MUST NOT be set as a status code in a
284 Close control frame by an endpoint. It is designated for use in
285 applications expecting a status code to indicate that the
286 connection was closed abnormally, e.g., without sending or
287 receiving a Close control frame.
291 1007 indicates that an endpoint is terminating the connection
292 because it has received data within a message that was not
293 consistent with the type of the message (e.g., non-UTF-8 [RFC3629]
294 data within a text message).
298 1008 indicates that an endpoint is terminating the connection
299 because it has received a message that violates its policy. This
300 is a generic status code that can be returned when there is no
301 other more suitable status code (e.g., 1003 or 1009) or if there
302 is a need to hide specific details about the policy.
306 1009 indicates that an endpoint is terminating the connection
307 because it has received a message that is too big for it to
312 1010 indicates that an endpoint (client) is terminating the
313 connection because it has expected the server to negotiate one or
314 more extension, but the server didn't return them in the response
315 message of the WebSocket handshake. The list of extensions that
316 are needed SHOULD appear in the /reason/ part of the Close frame.
317 Note that this status code is not used by the server, because it
318 can fail the WebSocket handshake instead.
322 1011 indicates that a server is terminating the connection because
323 it encountered an unexpected condition that prevented it from
324 fulfilling the request.
328 1015 is a reserved value and MUST NOT be set as a status code in a
329 Close control frame by an endpoint. It is designated for use in
330 applications expecting a status code to indicate that the
331 connection was closed due to a failure to perform a TLS handshake
332 (e.g., the server certificate can't be verified).
335 enum lws_close_status {
336 LWS_CLOSE_STATUS_NOSTATUS = 0,
337 LWS_CLOSE_STATUS_NORMAL = 1000,
338 LWS_CLOSE_STATUS_GOINGAWAY = 1001,
339 LWS_CLOSE_STATUS_PROTOCOL_ERR = 1002,
340 LWS_CLOSE_STATUS_UNACCEPTABLE_OPCODE = 1003,
341 LWS_CLOSE_STATUS_RESERVED = 1004,
342 LWS_CLOSE_STATUS_NO_STATUS = 1005,
343 LWS_CLOSE_STATUS_ABNORMAL_CLOSE = 1006,
344 LWS_CLOSE_STATUS_INVALID_PAYLOAD = 1007,
345 LWS_CLOSE_STATUS_POLICY_VIOLATION = 1008,
346 LWS_CLOSE_STATUS_MESSAGE_TOO_LARGE = 1009,
347 LWS_CLOSE_STATUS_EXTENSION_REQUIRED = 1010,
348 LWS_CLOSE_STATUS_UNEXPECTED_CONDITION = 1011,
349 LWS_CLOSE_STATUS_TLS_FAILURE = 1015,
353 struct libwebsocket_context;
354 /* needed even with extensions disabled for create context */
355 struct libwebsocket_extension;
358 * callback_function() - User server actions
359 * @context: Websockets context
360 * @wsi: Opaque websocket instance pointer
361 * @reason: The reason for the call
362 * @user: Pointer to per-session user data allocated by library
363 * @in: Pointer used for some callback reasons
364 * @len: Length set for some callback reasons
366 * This callback is the way the user controls what is served. All the
367 * protocol detail is hidden and handled by the library.
369 * For each connection / session there is user data allocated that is
370 * pointed to by "user". You set the size of this user data area when
371 * the library is initialized with libwebsocket_create_server.
373 * You get an opportunity to initialize user data when called back with
374 * LWS_CALLBACK_ESTABLISHED reason.
376 * LWS_CALLBACK_ESTABLISHED: after the server completes a handshake with
379 * LWS_CALLBACK_CLIENT_CONNECTION_ERROR: the request client connection has
380 * been unable to complete a handshake with the remote server
382 * LWS_CALLBACK_CLIENT_ESTABLISHED: after your client connection completed
383 * a handshake with the remote server
385 * LWS_CALLBACK_CLOSED: when the websocket session ends
387 * LWS_CALLBACK_BROADCAST: signal to send to client (you would use
388 * libwebsocket_write() taking care about the
389 * special buffer requirements
391 * LWS_CALLBACK_RECEIVE: data has appeared for this server endpoint from a
392 * remote client, it can be found at *in and is
395 * LWS_CALLBACK_CLIENT_RECEIVE_PONG: if you elected to see PONG packets,
396 * they appear with this callback reason. PONG
397 * packets only exist in 04+ protocol
399 * LWS_CALLBACK_CLIENT_RECEIVE: data has appeared from the server for the
400 * client connection, it can be found at *in and
403 * LWS_CALLBACK_HTTP: an http request has come from a client that is not
404 * asking to upgrade the connection to a websocket
405 * one. This is a chance to serve http content,
406 * for example, to send a script to the client
407 * which will then open the websockets connection.
408 * @in points to the URI path requested and
409 * libwebsockets_serve_http_file() makes it very
410 * simple to send back a file to the client.
411 * Normally after sending the file you are done
412 * with the http connection, since the rest of the
413 * activity will come by websockets from the script
414 * that was delivered by http, so you will want to
415 * return 1; to close and free up the connection.
416 * That's important because it uses a slot in the
417 * total number of client connections allowed set
420 * LWS_CALLBACK_HTTP_FILE_COMPLETION: a file requested to be send down
421 * http link has completed.
423 * LWS_CALLBACK_CLIENT_WRITEABLE:
424 * LWS_CALLBACK_SERVER_WRITEABLE: If you call
425 * libwebsocket_callback_on_writable() on a connection, you will
426 * get one of these callbacks coming when the connection socket
427 * is able to accept another write packet without blocking.
428 * If it already was able to take another packet without blocking,
429 * you'll get this callback at the next call to the service loop
430 * function. Notice that CLIENTs get LWS_CALLBACK_CLIENT_WRITEABLE
431 * and servers get LWS_CALLBACK_SERVER_WRITEABLE.
433 * LWS_CALLBACK_FILTER_NETWORK_CONNECTION: called when a client connects to
434 * the server at network level; the connection is accepted but then
435 * passed to this callback to decide whether to hang up immediately
436 * or not, based on the client IP. @user contains the connection
437 * socket's descriptor. Return non-zero to terminate
438 * the connection before sending or receiving anything.
439 * Because this happens immediately after the network connection
440 * from the client, there's no websocket protocol selected yet so
441 * this callback is issued only to protocol 0.
443 * LWS_CALLBACK_FILTER_PROTOCOL_CONNECTION: called when the handshake has
444 * been received and parsed from the client, but the response is
445 * not sent yet. Return non-zero to disallow the connection.
446 * @user is a pointer to an array of struct lws_tokens, you can
447 * use the header enums lws_token_indexes from libwebsockets.h
448 * to check for and read the supported header presence and
449 * content before deciding to allow the handshake to proceed or
450 * to kill the connection.
452 * LWS_CALLBACK_OPENSSL_LOAD_EXTRA_CLIENT_VERIFY_CERTS: if configured for
453 * including OpenSSL support, this callback allows your user code
454 * to perform extra SSL_CTX_load_verify_locations() or similar
455 * calls to direct OpenSSL where to find certificates the client
456 * can use to confirm the remote server identity. @user is the
459 * LWS_CALLBACK_OPENSSL_LOAD_EXTRA_SERVER_VERIFY_CERTS: if configured for
460 * including OpenSSL support, this callback allows your user code
461 * to load extra certifcates into the server which allow it to
462 * verify the validity of certificates returned by clients. @user
463 * is the server's OpenSSL SSL_CTX*
465 * LWS_CALLBACK_OPENSSL_PERFORM_CLIENT_CERT_VERIFICATION: if the
466 * libwebsockets context was created with the option
467 * LWS_SERVER_OPTION_REQUIRE_VALID_OPENSSL_CLIENT_CERT, then this
468 * callback is generated during OpenSSL verification of the cert
469 * sent from the client. It is sent to protocol[0] callback as
470 * no protocol has been negotiated on the connection yet.
471 * Notice that the libwebsockets context and wsi are both NULL
472 * during this callback. See
473 * http://www.openssl.org/docs/ssl/SSL_CTX_set_verify.html
474 * to understand more detail about the OpenSSL callback that
475 * generates this libwebsockets callback and the meanings of the
476 * arguments passed. In this callback, @user is the x509_ctx,
477 * @in is the ssl pointer and @len is preverify_ok
478 * Notice that this callback maintains libwebsocket return
479 * conventions, return 0 to mean the cert is OK or 1 to fail it.
480 * This also means that if you don't handle this callback then
481 * the default callback action of returning 0 allows the client
484 * LWS_CALLBACK_CLIENT_APPEND_HANDSHAKE_HEADER: this callback happens
485 * when a client handshake is being compiled. @user is NULL,
486 * @in is a char **, it's pointing to a char * which holds the
487 * next location in the header buffer where you can add
488 * headers, and @len is the remaining space in the header buffer,
489 * which is typically some hundreds of bytes. So, to add a canned
490 * cookie, your handler code might look similar to:
492 * char **p = (char **)in;
497 * *p += sprintf(*p, "Cookie: a=b\x0d\x0a");
501 * Notice if you add anything, you just have to take care about
502 * the CRLF on the line you added. Obviously this callback is
503 * optional, if you don't handle it everything is fine.
505 * Notice the callback is coming to protocols[0] all the time,
506 * because there is no specific protocol handshook yet.
508 * LWS_CALLBACK_CONFIRM_EXTENSION_OKAY: When the server handshake code
509 * sees that it does support a requested extension, before
510 * accepting the extension by additing to the list sent back to
511 * the client it gives this callback just to check that it's okay
512 * to use that extension. It calls back to the requested protocol
513 * and with @in being the extension name, @len is 0 and @user is
514 * valid. Note though at this time the ESTABLISHED callback hasn't
515 * happened yet so if you initialize @user content there, @user
516 * content during this callback might not be useful for anything.
517 * Notice this callback comes to protocols[0].
519 * LWS_CALLBACK_CLIENT_CONFIRM_EXTENSION_SUPPORTED: When a client
520 * connection is being prepared to start a handshake to a server,
521 * each supported extension is checked with protocols[0] callback
522 * with this reason, giving the user code a chance to suppress the
523 * claim to support that extension by returning non-zero. If
524 * unhandled, by default 0 will be returned and the extension
525 * support included in the header to the server. Notice this
526 * callback comes to protocols[0].
528 * The next four reasons are optional and only need taking care of if you
529 * will be integrating libwebsockets sockets into an external polling
532 * LWS_CALLBACK_ADD_POLL_FD: libwebsocket deals with its poll() loop
533 * internally, but in the case you are integrating with another
534 * server you will need to have libwebsocket sockets share a
535 * polling array with the other server. This and the other
536 * POLL_FD related callbacks let you put your specialized
537 * poll array interface code in the callback for protocol 0, the
538 * first protocol you support, usually the HTTP protocol in the
539 * serving case. This callback happens when a socket needs to be
540 * added to the polling loop: @user contains the fd, and
541 * @len is the events bitmap (like, POLLIN). If you are using the
542 * internal polling loop (the "service" callback), you can just
543 * ignore these callbacks.
545 * LWS_CALLBACK_DEL_POLL_FD: This callback happens when a socket descriptor
546 * needs to be removed from an external polling array. @user is
547 * the socket desricptor. If you are using the internal polling
548 * loop, you can just ignore it.
550 * LWS_CALLBACK_SET_MODE_POLL_FD: This callback happens when libwebsockets
551 * wants to modify the events for the socket descriptor in @user.
552 * The handler should OR @len on to the events member of the pollfd
553 * struct for this socket descriptor. If you are using the
554 * internal polling loop, you can just ignore it.
556 * LWS_CALLBACK_CLEAR_MODE_POLL_FD: This callback occurs when libwebsockets
557 * wants to modify the events for the socket descriptor in @user.
558 * The handler should AND ~@len on to the events member of the
559 * pollfd struct for this socket descriptor. If you are using the
560 * internal polling loop, you can just ignore it.
562 LWS_EXTERN int callback(struct libwebsocket_context * context,
563 struct libwebsocket *wsi,
564 enum libwebsocket_callback_reasons reason, void *user,
565 void *in, size_t len);
567 typedef int (callback_function)(struct libwebsocket_context * context,
568 struct libwebsocket *wsi,
569 enum libwebsocket_callback_reasons reason, void *user,
570 void *in, size_t len);
572 #ifndef LWS_NO_EXTENSIONS
574 * extension_callback_function() - Hooks to allow extensions to operate
575 * @context: Websockets context
576 * @ext: This extension
577 * @wsi: Opaque websocket instance pointer
578 * @reason: The reason for the call
579 * @user: Pointer to per-session user data allocated by library
580 * @in: Pointer used for some callback reasons
581 * @len: Length set for some callback reasons
583 * Each extension that is active on a particular connection receives
584 * callbacks during the connection lifetime to allow the extension to
585 * operate on websocket data and manage itself.
587 * Libwebsockets takes care of allocating and freeing "user" memory for
588 * each active extension on each connection. That is what is pointed to
589 * by the @user parameter.
591 * LWS_EXT_CALLBACK_CONSTRUCT: called when the server has decided to
592 * select this extension from the list provided by the client,
593 * just before the server will send back the handshake accepting
594 * the connection with this extension active. This gives the
595 * extension a chance to initialize its connection context found
598 * LWS_EXT_CALLBACK_CLIENT_CONSTRUCT: same as LWS_EXT_CALLBACK_CONSTRUCT
599 * but called when client is instantiating this extension. Some
600 * extensions will work the same on client and server side and then
601 * you can just merge handlers for both CONSTRUCTS.
603 * LWS_EXT_CALLBACK_DESTROY: called when the connection the extension was
604 * being used on is about to be closed and deallocated. It's the
605 * last chance for the extension to deallocate anything it has
606 * allocated in the user data (pointed to by @user) before the
607 * user data is deleted. This same callback is used whether you
608 * are in client or server instantiation context.
610 * LWS_EXT_CALLBACK_PACKET_RX_PREPARSE: when this extension was active on
611 * a connection, and a packet of data arrived at the connection,
612 * it is passed to this callback to give the extension a chance to
613 * change the data, eg, decompress it. @user is pointing to the
614 * extension's private connection context data, @in is pointing
615 * to an lws_tokens struct, it consists of a char * pointer called
616 * token, and an int called token_len. At entry, these are
617 * set to point to the received buffer and set to the content
618 * length. If the extension will grow the content, it should use
619 * a new buffer allocated in its private user context data and
620 * set the pointed-to lws_tokens members to point to its buffer.
622 * LWS_EXT_CALLBACK_PACKET_TX_PRESEND: this works the same way as
623 * LWS_EXT_CALLBACK_PACKET_RX_PREPARSE above, except it gives the
624 * extension a chance to change websocket data just before it will
625 * be sent out. Using the same lws_token pointer scheme in @in,
626 * the extension can change the buffer and the length to be
627 * transmitted how it likes. Again if it wants to grow the
628 * buffer safely, it should copy the data into its own buffer and
629 * set the lws_tokens token pointer to it.
631 LWS_EXTERN int extension_callback(struct libwebsocket_context * context,
632 struct libwebsocket_extension *ext,
633 struct libwebsocket *wsi,
634 enum libwebsocket_extension_callback_reasons reason, void *user,
635 void *in, size_t len);
637 typedef int (extension_callback_function)(struct libwebsocket_context * context,
638 struct libwebsocket_extension *ext,
639 struct libwebsocket *wsi,
640 enum libwebsocket_extension_callback_reasons reason, void *user,
641 void *in, size_t len);
645 * struct libwebsocket_protocols - List of protocols and handlers server
647 * @name: Protocol name that must match the one given in the client
648 * Javascript new WebSocket(url, 'protocol') name
649 * @callback: The service callback used for this protocol. It allows the
650 * service action for an entire protocol to be encapsulated in
651 * the protocol-specific callback
652 * @per_session_data_size: Each new connection using this protocol gets
653 * this much memory allocated on connection establishment and
654 * freed on connection takedown. A pointer to this per-connection
655 * allocation is passed into the callback in the 'user' parameter
656 * @owning_server: the server init call fills in this opaque pointer when
657 * registering this protocol with the server.
658 * @broadcast_socket_port: the server init call fills this in with the
659 * localhost port number used to forward broadcasts for this
661 * @broadcast_socket_user_fd: the server init call fills this in ... the main()
662 * process context can write to this socket to perform broadcasts
663 * (use the libwebsockets_broadcast() api to do this instead,
664 * it works from any process context)
665 * @protocol_index: which protocol we are starting from zero
667 * This structure represents one protocol supported by the server. An
668 * array of these structures is passed to libwebsocket_create_server()
669 * allows as many protocols as you like to be handled by one server.
672 struct libwebsocket_protocols {
674 callback_function *callback;
675 size_t per_session_data_size;
678 * below are filled in on server init and can be left uninitialized,
679 * no need for user to use them directly either
682 struct libwebsocket_context *owning_server;
683 int broadcast_socket_port;
684 int broadcast_socket_user_fd;
688 #ifndef LWS_NO_EXTENSIONS
690 * struct libwebsocket_extension - An extension we know how to cope with
692 * @name: Formal extension name, eg, "deflate-stream"
693 * @callback: Service callback
694 * @per_session_data_size: Libwebsockets will auto-malloc this much
695 * memory for the use of the extension, a pointer
696 * to it comes in the @user callback parameter
697 * @per_context_private_data: Optional storage for this externsion that
698 * is per-context, so it can track stuff across
699 * all sessions, etc, if it wants
702 struct libwebsocket_extension {
704 extension_callback_function *callback;
705 size_t per_session_data_size;
706 void * per_context_private_data;
711 void lws_set_log_level(int level, void (*log_emit_function)(int level, const char *line));
714 lwsl_emit_syslog(int level, const char *line);
716 LWS_EXTERN struct libwebsocket_context *
717 libwebsocket_create_context(int port, const char * interf,
718 struct libwebsocket_protocols *protocols,
719 struct libwebsocket_extension *extensions,
720 const char *ssl_cert_filepath,
721 const char *ssl_private_key_filepath,
722 const char *ssl_ca_filepath,
724 unsigned int options, void *user);
727 libwebsocket_context_destroy(struct libwebsocket_context *context);
730 libwebsockets_fork_service_loop(struct libwebsocket_context *context);
733 libwebsocket_service(struct libwebsocket_context *context, int timeout_ms);
736 libwebsocket_service_fd(struct libwebsocket_context *context,
737 struct pollfd *pollfd);
740 libwebsocket_context_user(struct libwebsocket_context *context);
745 * When sending with websocket protocol (LWS_WRITE_TEXT or LWS_WRITE_BINARY)
746 * the send buffer has to have LWS_SEND_BUFFER_PRE_PADDING bytes valid BEFORE
747 * buf, and LWS_SEND_BUFFER_POST_PADDING bytes valid AFTER (buf + len).
749 * This allows us to add protocol info before and after the data, and send as
750 * one packet on the network without payload copying, for maximum efficiency.
752 * So for example you need this kind of code to use libwebsocket_write with a
755 * char buf[LWS_SEND_BUFFER_PRE_PADDING + 128 + LWS_SEND_BUFFER_POST_PADDING];
757 * // fill your part of the buffer... for example here it's all zeros
758 * memset(&buf[LWS_SEND_BUFFER_PRE_PADDING], 0, 128);
760 * libwebsocket_write(wsi, &buf[LWS_SEND_BUFFER_PRE_PADDING], 128);
762 * When sending LWS_WRITE_HTTP, there is no protocol addition and you can just
763 * use the whole buffer without taking care of the above.
767 * this is the frame nonce plus two header plus 8 length
768 * there's an additional two for mux extension per mux nesting level
769 * 2 byte prepend on close will already fit because control frames cannot use
770 * the big length style
773 #define LWS_SEND_BUFFER_PRE_PADDING (4 + 10 + (2 * MAX_MUX_RECURSION))
774 #define LWS_SEND_BUFFER_POST_PADDING 4
777 libwebsocket_write(struct libwebsocket *wsi, unsigned char *buf, size_t len,
778 enum libwebsocket_write_protocol protocol);
781 libwebsockets_serve_http_file(struct libwebsocket_context *context,
782 struct libwebsocket *wsi, const char *file,
783 const char *content_type);
785 libwebsockets_serve_http_file_fragment(struct libwebsocket_context *context,
786 struct libwebsocket *wsi);
788 /* notice - you need the pre- and post- padding allocation for buf below */
791 libwebsockets_broadcast(const struct libwebsocket_protocols *protocol,
792 unsigned char *buf, size_t len);
794 LWS_EXTERN const struct libwebsocket_protocols *
795 libwebsockets_get_protocol(struct libwebsocket *wsi);
798 libwebsocket_callback_on_writable(struct libwebsocket_context *context,
799 struct libwebsocket *wsi);
802 libwebsocket_callback_on_writable_all_protocol(
803 const struct libwebsocket_protocols *protocol);
806 libwebsocket_get_socket_fd(struct libwebsocket *wsi);
809 libwebsocket_is_final_fragment(struct libwebsocket *wsi);
811 LWS_EXTERN unsigned char
812 libwebsocket_get_reserved_bits(struct libwebsocket *wsi);
815 libwebsocket_ensure_user_space(struct libwebsocket *wsi);
818 libwebsocket_rx_flow_control(struct libwebsocket *wsi, int enable);
821 libwebsockets_remaining_packet_payload(struct libwebsocket *wsi);
823 LWS_EXTERN struct libwebsocket *
824 libwebsocket_client_connect(struct libwebsocket_context *clients,
831 const char *protocol,
832 int ietf_version_or_minus_one);
834 LWS_EXTERN struct libwebsocket *
835 libwebsocket_client_connect_extended(struct libwebsocket_context *clients,
842 const char *protocol,
843 int ietf_version_or_minus_one,
846 LWS_EXTERN const char *
847 libwebsocket_canonical_hostname(struct libwebsocket_context *context);
851 libwebsockets_get_peer_addresses(int fd, char *name, int name_len,
852 char *rip, int rip_len);
855 libwebsockets_hangup_on_client(struct libwebsocket_context *context, int fd);
858 libwebsocket_close_and_free_session(struct libwebsocket_context *context,
859 struct libwebsocket *wsi, enum lws_close_status);
862 libwebsockets_get_random(struct libwebsocket_context *context,
866 lws_daemonize(const char *_lock_path);
869 lws_send_pipe_choked(struct libwebsocket *wsi);
872 lws_frame_is_binary(struct libwebsocket *wsi);
874 LWS_EXTERN unsigned char *
875 libwebsockets_SHA1(const unsigned char *d, size_t n, unsigned char *md);
878 lws_b64_encode_string(const char *in, int in_len, char *out, int out_size);
881 lws_b64_decode_string(const char *in, char *out, int out_size);
883 #ifndef LWS_NO_EXTENSIONS
884 LWS_EXTERN struct libwebsocket_extension libwebsocket_internal_extensions[];