+Overview of lws test apps
+=========================
+
+Are you building a client? You just need to look at the test client
+[libwebsockets-test-client](test-server/test-client.c).
+
+If you are building a standalone server, there are three choices, in order of
+preferability.
+
+1) lwsws + protocol plugins
+
+Lws provides a generic web server app that can be configured with JSON
+config files. https://libwebsockets.org itself uses this method.
+
+With lwsws handling the serving part, you only need to write an lws protocol
+plugin. See [plugin-standalone](plugin-standalone) for an example of how
+to do that outside lws itself, using lws public apis.
+
+ $ cmake .. -DLWS_WITH_LWSWS=1
+
+See [README.lwsws.md](README.lwsws.md) for information on how to configure
+lwsws.
+
+NOTE this method implies libuv is used by lws, to provide crossplatform
+implementations of timers, dynamic lib loading etc for plugins and lwsws.
+
+2) test-server-v2.0.c
+
+This method lets you configure web serving in code, instead of using lwsws.
+
+Plugins are still used, which implies libuv needed.
+
+ $ cmake .. -DLWS_WITH_PLUGINS=1
+
+See [test-server-v2.0.c](test-server/test-server-v2.0.c)
+
+3) protocols in the server app
+
+This is the original way lws implemented servers, plugins and libuv are not
+required, but without plugins separating the protocol code directly, the
+combined code is all squidged together and is much less maintainable.
+
+This method is still supported in lws but all ongoing and future work is
+being done in protocol plugins only.
+
+
Notes about lws test apps
=========================
-Testing server with a browser
------------------------------
+@section tsb Testing server with a browser
If you run [libwebsockets-test-server](test-server/test-server.c) and point your browser
(eg, Chrome) to
what is logged using `-d <log level>`, see later.
-Running test server as a Daemon
--------------------------------
+@section tsd Running test server as a Daemon
You can use the -D option on the test server to have it fork into the
background and return immediately. In this daemonized mode all stderr is
it was already running.
-Using SSL on the server side
-----------------------------
+@section sssl Using SSL on the server side
To test it using SSL/WSS, just run the test server with
```
serving both the script html over http and websockets.
-Testing websocket client support
---------------------------------
+@section wscl Testing websocket client support
If you run the test server as described above, you can also
connect to it using the test client as well as a browser.
$ libwebsockets-test-client localhost --ssl -s
```
-the -s tells it to accept the default selfsigned cert from the server,
+the -s tells it to accept the default self-signed cert from the server,
otherwise it will strictly fail the connection if there is no CA cert to
validate the server's certificate.
-Choosing between test server variations
----------------------------------------
+@section choosingts Choosing between test server variations
If you will be doing standalone serving with lws, ideally you should avoid
making your own server at all, and use lwsws with your own protocol plugins.
should be considered.
-Testing simple echo
--------------------
+@section echo Testing simple echo
You can test against `echo.websockets.org` as a sanity test like
this (the client connects to port `80` by default):
with an encrypted link.
-Testing SSL on the client side
-------------------------------
+@section tassl Testing SSL on the client side
To test SSL/WSS client action, just run the client test with
```
$ libwebsockets-test-client localhost --ssl
```
-By default the client test applet is set to accept selfsigned
+By default the client test applet is set to accept self-signed
certificates used by the test server, this is indicated by the
`use_ssl` var being set to `2`. Set it to `1` to reject any server
certificate that it doesn't have a trusted CA cert for.
-Using the websocket ping utility
---------------------------------
+@section taping Using the websocket ping utility
libwebsockets-test-ping connects as a client to a remote
websocket server and pings it like the
standard, you must complete a handshake with a specified
protocol. By default lws-mirror-protocol is used which is
supported by the test server. But if you are using it on
-another server, you can specify the protcol to handshake with
+another server, you can specify the protocol to handshake with
by `--protocol=protocolname`
-Fraggle test app
-----------------
+@section ta fraggle Fraggle test app
By default it runs in server mode
```
then accepts the server checksum message and compares that to its checksum.
-proxy support
--------------
+@section taproxy proxy support
The http_proxy environment variable is respected by the client
connection code for both `ws://` and `wss://`. It doesn't support
$ libwebsockets-test-client someserver.com
```
-debug logging
--------------
+@section talog debug logging
By default logging of severity "notice", "warn" or "err" is enabled to stderr.
Again by default other logging is compiled in but disabled from printing.
-If you want to eliminate the debug logging below notice in severity, use the
-`--disable-debug` configure option to have it removed from the code by the
-preprocesser.
+By default debug logs below "notice" in severity are not compiled in. To get
+them included, add this option in CMAKE
+
+```
+ $ cmake .. -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=DEBUG
+```
If you want to see more detailed debug logs, you can control a bitfield to
select which logs types may print using the `lws_set_log_level()` api, in the
- 512 LATENCY
-Websocket version supported
----------------------------
+@section ws13 Websocket version supported
The final IETF standard is supported for both client and server, protocol
version 13.
-Latency Tracking
-----------------
+@section latency Latency Tracking
Since libwebsockets runs using `poll()` and a single threaded approach, any
unexpected latency coming from system calls would be bad news. There's now
treatment to the other app during that call.
-Autobahn Test Suite
--------------------
+@section autobahn Autobahn Test Suite
Lws can be tested against the autobahn websocket fuzzer.
to see the results
-Autobahn Test Notes
--------------------
+@section autobahnnotes Autobahn Test Notes
1) Autobahn tests the user code + lws implementation. So to get the same
-results, you need to follow test-echo.c in terms of user implmentation.
+results, you need to follow test-echo.c in terms of user implementation.
-2) Some of the tests make no sense for Libwebsockets to support and we fail them.
+2) Two of the tests make no sense for Libwebsockets to support and we fail them.
- Tests 2.10 + 2.11: sends multiple pings on one connection. Lws policy is to
only allow one active ping in flight on each connection, the rest are dropped.