table of contents
PYTHON-SOCKETIO(1) | python-socketio | PYTHON-SOCKETIO(1) |
NAME¶
python-socketio - python-socketio Documentation
This projects implements Socket.IO clients and servers that can run standalone or integrated with a variety of Python web frameworks.
GETTING STARTED¶
What is Socket.IO?¶
Socket.IO is a transport protocol that enables real-time bidirectional event-based communication between clients (typically, though not always, web browsers) and a server. The official implementations of the client and server components are written in JavaScript. This package provides Python implementations of both, each with standard and asyncio variants.
Version compatibility¶
The Socket.IO protocol has been through a number of revisions, and some of these introduced backward incompatible changes, which means that the client and the server must use compatible versions for everything to work.
If you are using the Python client and server, the easiest way to ensure compatibility is to use the same version of this package for the client and the server. If you are using this package with a different client or server, then you must ensure the versions are compatible.
The version compatibility chart below maps versions of this package to versions of the JavaScript reference implementation and the versions of the Socket.IO and Engine.IO protocols.
JavaScript Socket.IO version | Socket.IO protocol revision | Engine.IO protocol revision | python-socketio version | python-engineio version |
0.9.x | 1, 2 | 1, 2 | Not supported | Not supported |
1.x and 2.x | 3, 4 | 3 | 4.x | 3.x |
3.x and 4.x | 5 | 4 | 5.x | 4.x |
Client Examples¶
The example that follows shows a simple Python client:
import socketio sio = socketio.Client() @sio.event def connect():
print('connection established') @sio.event def my_message(data):
print('message received with ', data)
sio.emit('my response', {'response': 'my response'}) @sio.event def disconnect():
print('disconnected from server') sio.connect('http://localhost:5000') sio.wait()
Below is a similar client, coded for asyncio (Python 3.5+ only):
import asyncio import socketio sio = socketio.AsyncClient() @sio.event async def connect():
print('connection established') @sio.event async def my_message(data):
print('message received with ', data)
await sio.emit('my response', {'response': 'my response'}) @sio.event async def disconnect():
print('disconnected from server') async def main():
await sio.connect('http://localhost:5000')
await sio.wait() if __name__ == '__main__':
asyncio.run(main())
Client Features¶
- Can connect to other Socket.IO servers that are compatible with the JavaScript Socket.IO reference server.
- Compatible with Python 3.8+.
- Two versions of the client, one for standard Python and another for asyncio.
- Uses an event-based architecture implemented with decorators that hides the details of the protocol.
- Implements HTTP long-polling and WebSocket transports.
- Automatically reconnects to the server if the connection is dropped.
Server Examples¶
The following application is a basic server example that uses the Eventlet asynchronous server:
import eventlet import socketio sio = socketio.Server() app = socketio.WSGIApp(sio, static_files={
'/': {'content_type': 'text/html', 'filename': 'index.html'} }) @sio.event def connect(sid, environ):
print('connect ', sid) @sio.event def my_message(sid, data):
print('message ', data) @sio.event def disconnect(sid):
print('disconnect ', sid) if __name__ == '__main__':
eventlet.wsgi.server(eventlet.listen(('', 5000)), app)
Below is a similar application, coded for asyncio (Python 3.5+ only) and the Uvicorn web server:
from aiohttp import web import socketio sio = socketio.AsyncServer() app = web.Application() sio.attach(app) async def index(request):
"""Serve the client-side application."""
with open('index.html') as f:
return web.Response(text=f.read(), content_type='text/html') @sio.event def connect(sid, environ):
print("connect ", sid) @sio.event async def chat_message(sid, data):
print("message ", data) @sio.event def disconnect(sid):
print('disconnect ', sid) app.router.add_static('/static', 'static') app.router.add_get('/', index) if __name__ == '__main__':
web.run_app(app)
Server Features¶
- Can connect to servers running other Socket.IO clients that are compatible with the JavaScript reference client.
- Compatible with Python 3.8+.
- Two versions of the server, one for standard Python and another for asyncio.
- Supports large number of clients even on modest hardware due to being asynchronous.
- Can be hosted on any WSGI or ASGI web server including Gunicorn, Uvicorn, eventlet and gevent.
- Can be integrated with WSGI applications written in frameworks such as Flask, Django, etc.
- Can be integrated with aiohttp, FastAPI, sanic and tornado asyncio applications.
- Broadcasting of messages to all connected clients, or to subsets of them assigned to "rooms".
- Optional support for multiple servers, connected through a messaging queue such as Redis or RabbitMQ.
- Send messages to clients from external processes, such as Celery workers or auxiliary scripts.
- Event-based architecture implemented with decorators that hides the details of the protocol.
- Support for HTTP long-polling and WebSocket transports.
- Support for XHR2 and XHR browsers.
- Support for text and binary messages.
- Support for gzip and deflate HTTP compression.
- Configurable CORS responses, to avoid cross-origin problems with browsers.
THE SOCKET.IO CLIENTS¶
This package contains two Socket.IO clients:
- a "simple" client, which provides a straightforward API that is sufficient for most applications
- an "event-driven" client, which provides access to all the features of the Socket.IO protocol
Each of these clients comes in two variants: one for the standard Python library, and another for asynchronous applications built with the asyncio package.
Installation¶
To install the standard Python client along with its dependencies, use the following command:
pip install "python-socketio[client]"
If instead you plan on using the asyncio client, then use this:
pip install "python-socketio[asyncio_client]"
Using the Simple Client¶
The advantage of the simple client is that it abstracts away the logic required to maintain a Socket.IO connection. This client handles disconnections and reconnections in a completely transparent way, without adding any complexity to the application.
Creating a Client Instance¶
The easiest way to create a Socket.IO client is to use the context manager interface:
import socketio # standard Python with socketio.SimpleClient() as sio:
# ... connect to a server and use the client
# ... no need to manually disconnect! # asyncio async with socketio.AsyncSimpleClient() as sio:
# ... connect to a server and use the client
# ... no need to manually disconnect!
With this usage the context manager will ensure that the client is properly disconnected before exiting the with or async with block.
If preferred, a client can be manually instantiated:
import socketio # standard Python sio = socketio.SimpleClient() # asyncio sio = socketio.AsyncSimpleClient()
Connecting to a Server¶
The connection to a server is established by calling the connect() method:
sio.connect('http://localhost:5000')
In the case of the asyncio client, the method is a coroutine:
await sio.connect('http://localhost:5000')
By default the client first connects to the server using the long-polling transport, and then attempts to upgrade the connection to use WebSocket. To connect directly using WebSocket, use the transports argument:
sio.connect('http://localhost:5000', transports=['websocket'])
Upon connection, the server assigns the client a unique session identifier. The application can find this identifier in the sid attribute:
print('my sid is', sio.sid)
The Socket.IO transport that is used in the connection can be obtained from the transport attribute:
print('my transport is', sio.transport)
The transport is given as a string, and can be either 'websocket' or 'polling'.
TLS/SSL Support¶
The client supports TLS/SSL connections. To enable it, use a https:// connection URL:
sio.connect('https://example.com')
Or when using asyncio:
await sio.connect('https://example.com')
The client verifies server certificates by default. Consult the documentation for the event-driven client for information on how to customize this behavior.
Emitting Events¶
The client can emit an event to the server using the emit() method:
sio.emit('my message', {'foo': 'bar'})
Or in the case of asyncio, as a coroutine:
await sio.emit('my message', {'foo': 'bar'})
The arguments provided to the method are the name of the event to emit and the optional data that is passed on to the server. The data can be of type str, bytes, dict, list or tuple. When sending a list or a tuple, the elements in it need to be of any allowed types except tuple. When a tuple is used, the elements of the tuple will be passed as individual arguments to the server-side event handler function.
Receiving Events¶
The client can wait for the server to emit an event with the receive() method:
event = sio.receive() print(f'received event: "{event[0]}" with arguments {event[1:]}')
When using asyncio, this method needs to be awaited:
event = await sio.receive() print(f'received event: "{event[0]}" with arguments {event[1:]}')
The return value of receive() is a list. The first element of this list is the event name, while the remaining elements are the arguments passed by the server.
With the usage shown above, the receive() method will return only when an event is received from the server. An optional timeout in seconds can be passed to prevent the client from waiting forever:
from socketio.exceptions import TimeoutError try:
event = sio.receive(timeout=5) except TimeoutError:
print('timed out waiting for event') else:
print('received event:', event)
Or with asyncio:
from socketio.exceptions import TimeoutError try:
event = await sio.receive(timeout=5) except TimeoutError:
print('timed out waiting for event') else:
print('received event:', event)
Disconnecting from the Server¶
At any time the client can request to be disconnected from the server by invoking the disconnect() method:
sio.disconnect()
For the asyncio client this is a coroutine:
await sio.disconnect()
Debugging and Troubleshooting¶
To help you debug issues, the client can be configured to output logs to the terminal:
import socketio # standard Python sio = socketio.Client(logger=True, engineio_logger=True) # asyncio sio = socketio.AsyncClient(logger=True, engineio_logger=True)
The logger argument controls logging related to the Socket.IO protocol, while engineio_logger controls logs that originate in the low-level Engine.IO transport. These arguments can be set to True to output logs to stderr, or to an object compatible with Python's logging package where the logs should be emitted to. A value of False disables logging.
Logging can help identify the cause of connection problems, unexpected disconnections and other issues.
Using the Event-Driven Client¶
Creating a Client Instance¶
To instantiate an Socket.IO client, simply create an instance of the appropriate client class:
import socketio # standard Python sio = socketio.Client() # asyncio sio = socketio.AsyncClient()
Defining Event Handlers¶
The Socket.IO protocol is event based. When a server wants to communicate with a client it emits an event. Each event has a name, and a list of arguments. The client registers event handler functions with the socketio.Client.event() or socketio.Client.on() decorators:
@sio.event def message(data):
print('I received a message!') @sio.on('my message') def on_message(data):
print('I received a message!')
In the first example the event name is obtained from the name of the handler function. The second example is slightly more verbose, but it allows the event name to be different than the function name or to include characters that are illegal in function names, such as spaces.
For the asyncio client, event handlers can be regular functions as above, or can also be coroutines:
@sio.event async def message(data):
print('I received a message!')
If the server includes arguments with an event, those are passed to the handler function as arguments.
Catch-All Event and Namespace Handlers¶
A "catch-all" event handler is invoked for any events that do not have an event handler. You can define a catch-all handler using '*' as event name:
@sio.on('*') def any_event(event, sid, data):
pass
Asyncio servers can also use a coroutine:
@sio.on('*') async def any_event(event, sid, data):
pass
A catch-all event handler receives the event name as a first argument. The remaining arguments are the same as for a regular event handler.
The connect and disconnect events have to be defined explicitly and are not invoked on a catch-all event handler.
Similarily, a "catch-all" namespace handler is invoked for any connected namespaces that do not have an explicitly defined event handler. As with catch-all events, '*' is used in place of a namespace:
@sio.on('my_event', namespace='*') def my_event_any_namespace(namespace, sid, data):
pass
For these events, the namespace is passed as first argument, followed by the regular arguments of the event.
Lastly, it is also possible to define a "catch-all" handler for all events on all namespaces:
@sio.on('*', namespace='*') def any_event_any_namespace(event, namespace, sid, data):
pass
Event handlers with catch-all events and namespaces receive the event name and the namespace as first and second arguments.
Connect, Connect Error and Disconnect Event Handlers¶
The connect, connect_error and disconnect events are special; they are invoked automatically when a client connects or disconnects from the server:
@sio.event def connect():
print("I'm connected!") @sio.event def connect_error(data):
print("The connection failed!") @sio.event def disconnect(reason):
print("I'm disconnected! reason:", reason)
The connect_error handler is invoked when a connection attempt fails. If the server provides arguments, these are passed on to the handler. The server can use an argument to provide information to the client regarding the connection failure.
The disconnect handler is invoked for application initiated disconnects, server initiated disconnects, or accidental disconnects, for example due to networking failures. In the case of an accidental disconnection, the client is going to attempt to reconnect immediately after invoking the disconnect handler. As soon as the connection is re-established the connect handler will be invoked once again. The handler receives a reason argument which provides the cause of the disconnection:
@sio.event def disconnect(reason):
if reason == sio.reason.CLIENT_DISCONNECT:
print('the client disconnected')
elif reason == sio.reason.SERVER_DISCONNECT:
print('the server disconnected the client')
else:
print('disconnect reason:', reason)
See the The socketio.Client.reason attribute for a list of possible disconnection reasons.
The connect, connect_error and disconnect events have to be defined explicitly and are not invoked on a catch-all event handler.
Connecting to a Server¶
The connection to a server is established by calling the connect() method:
sio.connect('http://localhost:5000')
In the case of the asyncio client, the method is a coroutine:
await sio.connect('http://localhost:5000')
Upon connection, the server assigns the client a unique session identifier. The application can find this identifier in the sid attribute:
print('my sid is', sio.sid)
The Socket.IO transport that is used in the connection can be obtained from the transport attribute:
print('my transport is', sio.transport)
The transport is given as a string, and can be either 'websocket' or 'polling'.
TLS/SSL Support¶
The client supports TLS/SSL connections. To enable it, use a https:// connection URL:
sio.connect('https://example.com')
Or when using asyncio:
await sio.connect('https://example.com')
The client will verify the server certificate by default. To disable certificate verification, or to use other less common options such as client certificates, the client must be initialized with a custom HTTP session object that is configured with the desired TLS/SSL options.
The following example disables server certificate verification, which can be useful when connecting to a server that uses a self-signed certificate:
http_session = requests.Session() http_session.verify = False sio = socketio.Client(http_session=http_session) sio.connect('https://example.com')
And when using asyncio:
connector = aiohttp.TCPConnector(ssl=False) http_session = aiohttp.ClientSession(connector=connector) sio = socketio.AsyncClient(http_session=http_session) await sio.connect('https://example.com')
Instead of disabling certificate verification, you can provide a custom certificate authority bundle to verify the certificate against:
http_session = requests.Session() http_session.verify = '/path/to/ca.pem' sio = socketio.Client(http_session=http_session) sio.connect('https://example.com')
And for asyncio:
ssl_context = ssl.create_default_context() ssl_context.load_verify_locations('/path/to/ca.pem') connector = aiohttp.TCPConnector(ssl=ssl_context) http_session = aiohttp.ClientSession(connector=connector) sio = socketio.AsyncClient(http_session=http_session) await sio.connect('https://example.com')
Below you can see how to use a client certificate to authenticate against the server:
http_session = requests.Session() http_session.cert = ('/path/to/client/cert.pem', '/path/to/client/key.pem') sio = socketio.Client(http_session=http_session) sio.connect('https://example.com')
And for asyncio:
ssl_context = ssl.create_default_context(ssl.Purpose.CLIENT_AUTH) ssl_context.load_cert_chain('/path/to/client/cert.pem',
'/path/to/client/key.pem') connector = aiohttp.TCPConnector(ssl=ssl_context) http_session = aiohttp.ClientSession(connector=connector) sio = socketio.AsyncClient(http_session=http_session) await sio.connect('https://example.com')
Emitting Events¶
The client can emit an event to the server using the emit() method:
sio.emit('my message', {'foo': 'bar'})
Or in the case of asyncio, as a coroutine:
await sio.emit('my message', {'foo': 'bar'})
The arguments provided to the method are the name of the event to emit and the optional data that is passed on to the server. The data can be of type str, bytes, dict, list or tuple. When sending a list or a tuple, the elements in it need to be of any allowed types except tuple. When a tuple is used, the elements of the tuple will be passed as individual arguments to the server-side event handler function.
The emit() method can be invoked inside an event handler as a response to a server event, or in any other part of the application, including in background tasks.
Event Callbacks¶
When a server emits an event to a client, it can optionally provide a callback function, to be invoked as a way of acknowledgment that the server has processed the event. While this is entirely managed by the server, the client can provide a list of return values that are to be passed on to the callback function set up by the server. This is achieved simply by returning the desired values from the handler function:
@sio.event def my_event(sid, data):
# handle the message
return "OK", 123
Likewise, the client can request a callback function to be invoked after the server has processed an event. The socketio.Server.emit() method has an optional callback argument that can be set to a callable. If this argument is given, the callable will be invoked after the server has processed the event, and any values returned by the server handler will be passed as arguments to this function.
Namespaces¶
The Socket.IO protocol supports multiple logical connections, all multiplexed on the same physical connection. Clients can open multiple connections by specifying a different namespace on each. Namespaces use a path syntax starting with a forward slash. A list of namespaces can be given by the client in the connect() call. For example, this example creates two logical connections, the default one plus a second connection under the /chat namespace:
sio.connect('http://localhost:5000', namespaces=['/chat'])
To define event handlers on a namespace, the namespace argument must be added to the corresponding decorator:
@sio.event(namespace='/chat') def my_custom_event(sid, data):
pass @sio.on('connect', namespace='/chat') def on_connect():
print("I'm connected to the /chat namespace!")
Likewise, the client can emit an event to the server on a namespace by providing its in the emit() call:
sio.emit('my message', {'foo': 'bar'}, namespace='/chat')
If the namespaces argument of the connect() call isn't given, any namespaces used in event handlers are automatically connected.
Class-Based Namespaces¶
As an alternative to the decorator-based event handlers, the event handlers that belong to a namespace can be created as methods of a subclass of socketio.ClientNamespace:
class MyCustomNamespace(socketio.ClientNamespace):
def on_connect(self):
pass
def on_disconnect(self, reason):
pass
def on_my_event(self, data):
self.emit('my_response', data) sio.register_namespace(MyCustomNamespace('/chat'))
For asyncio based servers, namespaces must inherit from socketio.AsyncClientNamespace, and can define event handlers as coroutines if desired:
class MyCustomNamespace(socketio.AsyncClientNamespace):
def on_connect(self):
pass
def on_disconnect(self, reason):
pass
async def on_my_event(self, data):
await self.emit('my_response', data) sio.register_namespace(MyCustomNamespace('/chat'))
A catch-all class-based namespace handler can be defined by passing '*' as the namespace during registration:
sio.register_namespace(MyCustomNamespace('*'))
When class-based namespaces are used, any events received by the client are dispatched to a method named as the event name with the on_ prefix. For example, event my_event will be handled by a method named on_my_event. If an event is received for which there is no corresponding method defined in the namespace class, then the event is ignored. All event names used in class-based namespaces must use characters that are legal in method names.
As a convenience to methods defined in a class-based namespace, the namespace instance includes versions of several of the methods in the socketio.Client and socketio.AsyncClient classes that default to the proper namespace when the namespace argument is not given.
In the case that an event has a handler in a class-based namespace, and also a decorator-based function handler, only the standalone function handler is invoked.
Disconnecting from the Server¶
At any time the client can request to be disconnected from the server by invoking the disconnect() method:
sio.disconnect()
For the asyncio client this is a coroutine:
await sio.disconnect()
Managing Background Tasks¶
When a client connection to the server is established, a few background tasks will be spawned to keep the connection alive and handle incoming events. The application running on the main thread is free to do any work, as this is not going to prevent the functioning of the Socket.IO client.
If the application does not have anything to do in the main thread and just wants to wait until the connection with the server ends, it can call the wait() method:
sio.wait()
Or in the asyncio version:
await sio.wait()
For the convenience of the application, a helper function is provided to start a custom background task:
def my_background_task(my_argument):
# do some background work here!
pass task = sio.start_background_task(my_background_task, 123)
The arguments passed to this method are the background function and any positional or keyword arguments to invoke the function with.
Here is the asyncio version:
async def my_background_task(my_argument):
# do some background work here!
pass task = sio.start_background_task(my_background_task, 123)
Note that this function is not a coroutine, since it does not wait for the background function to end. The background function must be a coroutine.
The sleep() method is a second convenience function that is provided for the benefit of applications working with background tasks of their own:
sio.sleep(2)
Or for asyncio:
await sio.sleep(2)
The single argument passed to the method is the number of seconds to sleep for.
Debugging and Troubleshooting¶
To help you debug issues, the client can be configured to output logs to the terminal:
import socketio # standard Python sio = socketio.Client(logger=True, engineio_logger=True) # asyncio sio = socketio.AsyncClient(logger=True, engineio_logger=True)
The logger argument controls logging related to the Socket.IO protocol, while engineio_logger controls logs that originate in the low-level Engine.IO transport. These arguments can be set to True to output logs to stderr, or to an object compatible with Python's logging package where the logs should be emitted to. A value of False disables logging.
Logging can help identify the cause of connection problems, unexpected disconnections and other issues.
THE SOCKET.IO SERVER¶
This package contains two Socket.IO servers:
- The socketio.Server() class creates a server compatible with the Python standard library.
- The socketio.AsyncServer() class creates a server compatible with the asyncio package.
The methods in the two servers are the same, with the only difference that in the asyncio server most methods are implemented as coroutines.
Installation¶
To install the Socket.IO server along with its dependencies, use the following command:
pip install python-socketio
Creating a Server Instance¶
A Socket.IO server is an instance of class socketio.Server:
import socketio # create a Socket.IO server sio = socketio.Server()
For asyncio based servers, the socketio.AsyncServer class provides the same functionality, but in a coroutine friendly format:
import socketio # create a Socket.IO server sio = socketio.AsyncServer()
Running the Server¶
To run the Socket.IO application it is necessary to configure a web server to receive incoming requests from clients and forward them to the Socket.IO server instance. To simplify this task, several integrations are available, including support for the WSGI and ASGI standards.
Running as a WSGI Application¶
To configure the Socket.IO server as a WSGI application wrap the server instance with the socketio.WSGIApp class:
# wrap with a WSGI application app = socketio.WSGIApp(sio)
The resulting WSGI application can be executed with supported WSGI servers such as Werkzeug for development and Gunicorn for production.
When combining Socket.IO with a web application written with a WSGI framework such as Flask or Django, the WSGIApp class can wrap both applications together and route traffic to them:
from mywebapp import app # a Flask, Django, etc. application app = socketio.WSGIApp(sio, app)
Running as an ASGI Application¶
To configure the Socket.IO server as an ASGI application wrap the server instance with the socketio.ASGIApp class:
# wrap with ASGI application app = socketio.ASGIApp(sio)
The resulting ASGI application can be executed with an ASGI compliant web server, for example Uvicorn.
Socket.IO can also be combined with a web application written with an ASGI web framework such as FastAPI. In that case, the ASGIApp class can wrap both applications together and route traffic to them:
from mywebapp import app # a FastAPI or other ASGI application app = socketio.ASGIApp(sio, app)
Serving Static Files¶
The Socket.IO server can be configured to serve static files to clients. This is particularly useful to deliver HTML, CSS and JavaScript files to clients when this package is used without a companion web framework.
Static files are configured with a Python dictionary in which each key/value pair is a static file mapping rule. In its simplest form, this dictionary has one or more static file URLs as keys, and the corresponding files in the server as values:
static_files = {
'/': 'latency.html',
'/static/socket.io.js': 'static/socket.io.js',
'/static/style.css': 'static/style.css', }
With this example configuration, when the server receives a request for / (the root URL) it will return the contents of the file latency.html in the current directory, and will assign a content type based on the file extension, in this case text/html.
Files with the .html, .css, .js, .json, .jpg, .png, .gif and .txt file extensions are automatically recognized and assigned the correct content type. For files with other file extensions or with no file extension, the application/octet-stream content type is used as a default.
If desired, an explicit content type for a static file can be given as follows:
static_files = {
'/': {'filename': 'latency.html', 'content_type': 'text/plain'}, }
It is also possible to configure an entire directory in a single rule, so that all the files in it are served as static files:
static_files = {
'/static': './public', }
In this example any files with URLs starting with /static will be served directly from the public folder in the current directory, so for example, the URL /static/index.html will return local file ./public/index.html and the URL /static/css/styles.css will return local file ./public/css/styles.css.
If a URL that ends in a / is requested, then a default filename of index.html is appended to it. In the previous example, a request for the /static/ URL would return local file ./public/index.html. The default filename to serve for slash-ending URLs can be set in the static files dictionary with an empty key:
static_files = {
'/static': './public',
'': 'image.gif', }
With this configuration, a request for /static/ would return local file ./public/image.gif. A non-standard content type can also be specified if needed:
static_files = {
'/static': './public',
'': {'filename': 'image.gif', 'content_type': 'text/plain'}, }
The static file configuration dictionary is given as the static_files argument to the socketio.WSGIApp or socketio.ASGIApp classes:
# for standard WSGI applications sio = socketio.Server() app = socketio.WSGIApp(sio, static_files=static_files) # for asyncio-based ASGI applications sio = socketio.AsyncServer() app = socketio.ASGIApp(sio, static_files=static_files)
The routing precedence in these two classes is as follows:
- First, the path is checked against the Socket.IO endpoint.
- Next, the path is checked against the static file configuration, if present.
- If the path did not match the Socket.IO endpoint or any static file, control is passed to the secondary application if configured, else a 404 error is returned.
Note: static file serving is intended for development use only, and as such it lacks important features such as caching. Do not use in a production environment.
Events¶
The Socket.IO protocol is event based. When a client wants to communicate with the server, or the server wants to communicate with one or more clients, they emit an event to the other party. Each event has a name, and an optional list of arguments.
Listening to Events¶
To receive events from clients, the server application must register event handler functions. These functions are invoked when the corresponding events are emitted by clients. To register a handler for an event, the socketio.Server.event() or socketio.Server.on() decorators are used:
@sio.event def my_event(sid, data):
pass @sio.on('my custom event') def another_event(sid, data):
pass
In the first example the event name is obtained from the name of the handler function. The second example is slightly more verbose, but it allows the event name to be different than the function name or to include characters that are illegal in function names, such as spaces.
For asyncio servers, event handlers can optionally be given as coroutines:
@sio.event async def my_event(sid, data):
pass
The sid argument that is passed to all handlers is the Socket.IO session id, a unique identifier that Socket.IO assigns to each client connection. All the events sent by a given client will have the same sid value.
Connect and Disconnect Events¶
The connect and disconnect events are special; they are invoked automatically when a client connects or disconnects from the server:
@sio.event def connect(sid, environ, auth):
print('connect ', sid) @sio.event def disconnect(sid, reason):
print('disconnect ', sid, reason)
The connect event is an ideal place to perform user authentication, and any necessary mapping between user entities in the application and the sid that was assigned to the client.
In addition to the sid, the connect handler receives environ as an argument, with the request information in standard WSGI format, including HTTP headers. The connect handler also receives the auth argument with any authentication details passed by the client, or None if the client did not pass any authentication.
After inspecting the arguments, the connect event handler can return False to reject the connection with the client. Sometimes it is useful to pass data back to the client being rejected. In that case instead of returning False a socketio.exceptions.ConnectionRefusedError exception can be raised, and all of its arguments will be sent to the client with the rejection message:
@sio.event def connect(sid, environ, auth):
raise ConnectionRefusedError('authentication failed')
The disconnect handler receives the sid assigned to the client and a reason, which provides the cause of the disconnection:
@sio.event def disconnect(sid, reason):
if reason == sio.reason.CLIENT_DISCONNECT:
print('the client disconnected')
elif reason == sio.reason.SERVER_DISCONNECT:
print('the server disconnected the client')
else:
print('disconnect reason:', reason)
See the The socketio.Server.reason attribute for a list of possible disconnection reasons.
Catch-All Event Handlers¶
A "catch-all" event handler is invoked for any events that do not have an event handler. You can define a catch-all handler using '*' as event name:
@sio.on('*') def any_event(event, sid, data):
pass
Asyncio servers can also use a coroutine:
@sio.on('*') async def any_event(event, sid, data):
pass
A catch-all event handler receives the event name as a first argument. The remaining arguments are the same as for a regular event handler.
Note that the connect and disconnect events have to be defined explicitly and are not invoked on a catch-all event handler.
Emitting Events to Clients¶
Socket.IO is a bidirectional protocol, so at any time the server can send an event to its connected clients. The socketio.Server.emit() method is used for this task:
sio.emit('my event', {'data': 'foobar'})
The first argument is the event name, followed by an optional data payload of type str, bytes, list, dict or tuple. When sending a list, dict or tuple, the elements are also constrained to the same data types. When a tuple is sent, the elements of the tuple will be passed as multiple arguments to the client-side event handler function.
The above example will send the event to all the clients are connected. Sometimes the server may want to send an event just to one particular client. This can be achieved by adding a to argument to the emit call, with the sid of the client:
sio.emit('my event', {'data': 'foobar'}, to=user_sid)
The to argument is used to identify the client that should receive the event, and is set to the sid value assigned to that client's connection with the server. When to is omitted, the event is broadcasted to all connected clients.
Acknowledging Events¶
When a client sends an event to the server, it can optionally request to receive acknowledgment from the server. The sending of acknowledgements is automatically managed by the Socket.IO server, but the event handler function can provide a list of values that are to be passed on to the client with the acknowledgement simply by returning them:
@sio.event def my_event(sid, data):
# handle the message
return "OK", 123 # <-- client will have these as acknowledgement
Requesting Client Acknowledgements¶
Similar to how clients can request acknowledgements from the server, when the server is emitting to a single client it can also ask the client to acknowledge the event, and optionally return one or more values as a response.
The Socket.IO server supports two ways of working with client acknowledgements. The most convenient method is to replace socketio.Server.emit() with socketio.Server.call(). The call() method will emit the event, and then wait until the client sends an acknowledgement, returning any values provided by the client:
response = sio.call('my event', {'data': 'foobar'}, to=user_sid)
A much more primitive acknowledgement solution uses callback functions. The socketio.Server.emit() method has an optional callback argument that can be set to a callable. If this argument is given, the callable will be invoked after the client has processed the event, and any values returned by the client will be passed as arguments to this function:
def my_callback():
print("callback invoked!") sio.emit('my event', {'data': 'foobar'}, to=user_sid, callback=my_callback)
Rooms¶
To make it easy for the server to emit events to groups of related clients, the application can put its clients into "rooms", and then address messages to these rooms.
In previous examples, the to argument of the socketio.SocketIO.emit() method was used to designate a specific client as the recipient of the event. The to argument can also be given the name of a room, and then all the clients that are in that room will receive the event.
The application can create as many rooms as needed and manage which clients are in them using the socketio.Server.enter_room() and socketio.Server.leave_room() methods. Clients can be in as many rooms as needed and can be moved between rooms when necessary.
@sio.event def begin_chat(sid):
sio.enter_room(sid, 'chat_users') @sio.event def exit_chat(sid):
sio.leave_room(sid, 'chat_users')
In chat applications it is often desired that an event is broadcasted to all the members of the room except one, which is the originator of the event such as a chat message. The socketio.Server.emit() method provides an optional skip_sid argument to indicate a client that should be skipped during the broadcast.
@sio.event def my_message(sid, data):
sio.emit('my reply', data, room='chat_users', skip_sid=sid)
Namespaces¶
The Socket.IO protocol supports multiple logical connections, all multiplexed on the same physical connection. Clients can open multiple connections by specifying a different namespace on each. A namespace is given by the client as a pathname following the hostname and port. For example, connecting to http://example.com:8000/chat would open a connection to the namespace /chat.
Each namespace works independently from the others, with separate session IDs (sids), event handlers and rooms. Namespaces can be defined directly in the event handler functions, or they can also be created as classes.
Decorator-Based Namespaces¶
Decorator-based namespaces are regular event handlers that include the namespace argument in their decorator:
@sio.event(namespace='/chat') def my_custom_event(sid, data):
pass @sio.on('my custom event', namespace='/chat') def my_custom_event(sid, data):
pass
When emitting an event, the namespace optional argument is used to specify which namespace to send it on. When the namespace argument is omitted, the default Socket.IO namespace, which is named /, is used.
It is important that applications that use multiple namespaces specify the correct namespace when setting up their event handlers and rooms using the optional namespace argument. This argument must also be specified when emitting events under a namespace. Most methods in the socketio.Server class have the optional namespace argument.
Class-Based Namespaces¶
As an alternative to the decorator-based namespaces, the event handlers that belong to a namespace can be created as methods in a subclass of socketio.Namespace:
class MyCustomNamespace(socketio.Namespace):
def on_connect(self, sid, environ):
pass
def on_disconnect(self, sid, reason):
pass
def on_my_event(self, sid, data):
self.emit('my_response', data) sio.register_namespace(MyCustomNamespace('/test'))
For asyncio based servers, namespaces must inherit from socketio.AsyncNamespace, and can define event handlers as coroutines if desired:
class MyCustomNamespace(socketio.AsyncNamespace):
def on_connect(self, sid, environ):
pass
def on_disconnect(self, sid, reason):
pass
async def on_my_event(self, sid, data):
await self.emit('my_response', data) sio.register_namespace(MyCustomNamespace('/test'))
When class-based namespaces are used, any events received by the server are dispatched to a method named as the event name with the on_ prefix. For example, event my_event will be handled by a method named on_my_event. If an event is received for which there is no corresponding method defined in the namespace class, then the event is ignored. All event names used in class-based namespaces must use characters that are legal in method names.
As a convenience to methods defined in a class-based namespace, the namespace instance includes versions of several of the methods in the socketio.Server and socketio.AsyncServer classes that default to the proper namespace when the namespace argument is not given.
In the case that an event has a handler in a class-based namespace, and also a decorator-based function handler, only the standalone function handler is invoked.
It is important to note that class-based namespaces are singletons. This means that a single instance of a namespace class is used for all clients, and consequently, a namespace instance cannot be used to store client specific information.
Catch-All Namespaces¶
Similarily to catch-all event handlers, a "catch-all" namespace can be used when defining event handlers for any connected namespaces that do not have an explicitly defined event handler. As with catch-all events, '*' is used in place of a namespace:
@sio.on('my_event', namespace='*') def my_event_any_namespace(namespace, sid, data):
pass
For these events, the namespace is passed as first argument, followed by the regular arguments of the event.
A catch-all class-based namespace handler can be defined by passing '*' as the namespace during registration:
sio.register_namespace(MyCustomNamespace('*'))
A "catch-all" handler for all events on all namespaces can be defined as follows:
@sio.on('*', namespace='*') def any_event_any_namespace(event, namespace, sid, data):
pass
Event handlers with catch-all events and namespaces receive the event name and the namespace as first and second arguments.
User Sessions¶
The server can maintain application-specific information in a user session dedicated to each connected client. Applications can use the user session to write any details about the user that need to be preserved throughout the life of the connection, such as usernames or user ids.
The save_session() and get_session() methods are used to store and retrieve information in the user session:
@sio.event def connect(sid, environ):
username = authenticate_user(environ)
sio.save_session(sid, {'username': username}) @sio.event def message(sid, data):
session = sio.get_session(sid)
print('message from ', session['username'])
For the asyncio server, these methods are coroutines:
@sio.event async def connect(sid, environ):
username = authenticate_user(environ)
await sio.save_session(sid, {'username': username}) @sio.event async def message(sid, data):
session = await sio.get_session(sid)
print('message from ', session['username'])
The session can also be manipulated with the session() context manager:
@sio.event def connect(sid, environ):
username = authenticate_user(environ)
with sio.session(sid) as session:
session['username'] = username @sio.event def message(sid, data):
with sio.session(sid) as session:
print('message from ', session['username'])
For the asyncio server, an asynchronous context manager is used:
@sio.event async def connect(sid, environ):
username = authenticate_user(environ)
async with sio.session(sid) as session:
session['username'] = username @sio.event async def message(sid, data):
async with sio.session(sid) as session:
print('message from ', session['username'])
The get_session(), save_session() and session() methods take an optional namespace argument. If this argument isn't provided, the session is attached to the default namespace.
Note: the contents of the user session are destroyed when the client disconnects. In particular, user session contents are not preserved when a client reconnects after an unexpected disconnection from the server.
Cross-Origin Controls¶
For security reasons, this server enforces a same-origin policy by default. In practical terms, this means the following:
- If an incoming HTTP or WebSocket request includes the Origin header, this header must match the scheme and host of the connection URL. In case of a mismatch, a 400 status code response is returned and the connection is rejected.
- No restrictions are imposed on incoming requests that do not include the Origin header.
If necessary, the cors_allowed_origins option can be used to allow other origins. This argument can be set to a string to set a single allowed origin, or to a list to allow multiple origins. A special value of '*' can be used to instruct the server to allow all origins, but this should be done with care, as this could make the server vulnerable to Cross-Site Request Forgery (CSRF) attacks.
Monitoring and Administration¶
The Socket.IO server can be configured to accept connections from the official Socket.IO Admin UI. This tool provides real-time information about currently connected clients, rooms in use and events being emitted. It also allows an administrator to manually emit events, change room assignments and disconnect clients. The hosted version of this tool is available at https://admin.socket.io.
Given that enabling this feature can affect the performance of the server, it is disabled by default. To enable it, call the instrument() method. For example:
import os import socketio sio = socketio.Server(cors_allowed_origins=[
'http://localhost:5000',
'https://admin.socket.io', ]) sio.instrument(auth={
'username': 'admin',
'password': os.environ['ADMIN_PASSWORD'], })
This configures the server to accept connections from the hosted Admin UI client. Administrators can then open https://admin.socket.io in their web browsers and log in with username admin and the password given by the ADMIN_PASSWORD environment variable. To ensure the Admin UI front end is allowed to connect, CORS is also configured.
Consult the reference documentation to learn about additional configuration options that are available.
Debugging and Troubleshooting¶
To help you debug issues, the server can be configured to output logs to the terminal:
import socketio # standard Python sio = socketio.Server(logger=True, engineio_logger=True) # asyncio sio = socketio.AsyncServer(logger=True, engineio_logger=True)
The logger argument controls logging related to the Socket.IO protocol, while engineio_logger controls logs that originate in the low-level Engine.IO transport. These arguments can be set to True to output logs to stderr, or to an object compatible with Python's logging package where the logs should be emitted to. A value of False disables logging.
Logging can help identify the cause of connection problems, 400 responses, bad performance and other issues.
Concurrency and Web Server Integration¶
The Socket.IO server can be configured with different concurrency models depending on the needs of the application and the web server that is used. The concurrency model is given by the async_mode argument in the server. For example:
sio = socketio.Server(async_mode='threading')
The following sub-sections describe the available concurrency options for synchronous and asynchronous servers.
Standard Modes¶
- threading: the server will use Python threads for concurrency and will run on any multi-threaded WSGI server. This is the default mode when no other concurrency libraries are installed.
- gevent: the server will use greenlets through the gevent library for concurrency. A web server that is compatible with gevent is required.
- gevent_uwsgi: a variation of the gevent mode that is designed to work with the uWSGI web server.
- eventlet: the server will use greenlets through the eventlet library for concurrency. A web server that is compatible with eventlet is required. Use of eventlet is not recommended due to this project being in maintenance mode.
Asyncio Modes¶
The asynchronous options are all based on the asyncio package of the Python standard library, with minor variations depending on the web server platform that is used.
- asgi: use of any ASGI web server is required.
- aiohttp: use of the aiohttp web framework and server is required.
- tornado: use of the Tornado web framework and server is required.
- sanic: use of the Sanic web framework and server is required. When using Sanic, it is recommended to use the asgi mode instead.
Deployment Strategies¶
The following sections describe a variety of deployment strategies for Socket.IO servers.
Gunicorn¶
The simplest deployment strategy for the Socket.IO server is to use the popular Gunicorn web server in multi-threaded mode. The Socket.IO server must be wrapped by the socketio.WSGIApp class, so that it is compatible with the WSGI protocol:
sio = socketio.Server(async_mode='threading') app = socketio.WSGIApp(sio)
If desired, the socketio.WSGIApp class can forward any traffic that is not Socket.IO to another WSGI application, making it possible to deploy a standard WSGI web application built with frameworks such as Flask or Django and the Socket.IO server as a bundle:
sio = socketio.Server(async_mode='threading') app = socketio.WSGIApp(sio, other_wsgi_app)
The example that follows shows how to start a Socket.IO application using Gunicorn's threaded worker class:
$ gunicorn --workers 1 --threads 100 --bind 127.0.0.1:5000 module:app
With the above configuration the server will be able to handle close to 100 concurrent clients.
It is also possible to use more than one worker process, but this has two additional requirements:
- The clients must connect directly over WebSocket. The long-polling transport is incompatible with the way Gunicorn load balances requests among workers. To disable long-polling in the server, add transports=['websocket'] in the server constructor. Clients will have a similar option to initiate the connection with WebSocket.
- The socketio.Server() instances in each worker must be configured with a message queue to allow the workers to communicate with each other. See the Using a Message Queue section for more information.
When using multiple workers, the approximate number of connections the server will be able to accept can be calculated as the number of workers multiplied by the number of threads per worker.
Note that Gunicorn can also be used alongside uvicorn, gevent and eventlet. These options are discussed under the appropriate sections below.
Uvicorn (and other ASGI web servers)¶
When working with an asynchronous Socket.IO server, the easiest deployment strategy is to use an ASGI web server such as Uvicorn.
The socketio.ASGIApp class is an ASGI compatible application that can forward Socket.IO traffic to a socketio.AsyncServer instance:
sio = socketio.AsyncServer(async_mode='asgi') app = socketio.ASGIApp(sio)
If desired, the socketio.ASGIApp class can forward any traffic that is not Socket.IO to another ASGI application, making it possible to deploy a standard ASGI web application built with a framework such as FastAPI and the Socket.IO server as a bundle:
sio = socketio.AsyncServer(async_mode='asgi') app = socketio.ASGIApp(sio, other_asgi_app)
The following example starts the application with Uvicorn:
uvicorn --port 5000 module:app
Uvicorn can also be used through its Gunicorn worker:
gunicorn --workers 1 --worker-class uvicorn.workers.UvicornWorker --bind 127.0.0.1:5000
See the Gunicorn section above for information on how to use Gunicorn with multiple workers.
Hypercorn, Daphne, and other ASGI servers¶
To use an ASGI web server other than Uvicorn, configure the application for ASGI as shown above for Uvicorn, then follow the documentation of your chosen web server to start the application.
Aiohttp¶
Another option for deploying an asynchronous Socket.IO server is to use the Aiohttp web framework and server. Instances of class socketio.AsyncServer will automatically use Aiohttp if the library is installed. To request its use explicitly, the async_mode option can be given in the constructor:
sio = socketio.AsyncServer(async_mode='aiohttp')
A server configured for Aiohttp must be attached to an existing application:
app = web.Application() sio.attach(app)
The Aiohttp application can define regular routes that will coexist with the Socket.IO server. A typical pattern is to add routes that serve a client application and any associated static files.
The Aiohttp application is then executed in the usual manner:
if __name__ == '__main__':
web.run_app(app)
Gevent¶
When a multi-threaded web server is unable to satisfy the concurrency and scalability requirements of the application, an option to try is Gevent. Gevent is a coroutine-based concurrency library based on greenlets, which are significantly lighter than threads.
Instances of class socketio.Server will automatically use Gevent if the library is installed. To request gevent to be selected explicitly, the async_mode option can be given in the constructor:
sio = socketio.Server(async_mode='gevent')
The Socket.IO server must be wrapped by the socketio.WSGIApp class, so that it is compatible with the WSGI protocol:
app = socketio.WSGIApp(sio)
If desired, the socketio.WSGIApp class can forward any traffic that is not Socket.IO to another WSGI application, making it possible to deploy a standard WSGI web application built with frameworks such as Flask or Django and the Socket.IO server as a bundle:
sio = socketio.Server(async_mode='gevent') app = socketio.WSGIApp(sio, other_wsgi_app)
A server configured for Gevent is deployed as a regular WSGI application using the provided socketio.WSGIApp:
from gevent import pywsgi pywsgi.WSGIServer(('', 8000), app).serve_forever()
Gevent with Gunicorn¶
An alternative to running the gevent WSGI server as above is to use Gunicorn with its Gevent worker. The command to launch the application under Gunicorn and Gevent is shown below:
$ gunicorn -k gevent -w 1 -b 127.0.0.1:5000 module:app
See the Gunicorn section above for information on how to use Gunicorn with multiple workers.
Gevent provides a monkey_patch() function that replaces all the blocking functions in the standard library with equivalent asynchronous versions. While the Socket.IO server does not require monkey patching, other libraries such as database or message queue drivers are likely to require it.
Gevent with uWSGI¶
When using the uWSGI server in combination with gevent, the Socket.IO server can take advantage of uWSGI's native WebSocket support.
Instances of class socketio.Server will automatically use this option for asynchronous operations if both gevent and uWSGI are installed and eventlet is not installed. To request this asynchronous mode explicitly, the async_mode option can be given in the constructor:
# gevent with uWSGI sio = socketio.Server(async_mode='gevent_uwsgi')
A complete explanation of the configuration and usage of the uWSGI server is beyond the scope of this documentation. The uWSGI server is a fairly complex package that provides a large and comprehensive set of options. It must be compiled with WebSocket and SSL support for the WebSocket transport to be available. As way of an introduction, the following command starts a uWSGI server for the latency.py example on port 5000:
$ uwsgi --http :5000 --gevent 1000 --http-websockets --master --wsgi-file latency.py --callable app
Tornado¶
Instances of class socketio.AsyncServer will automatically use Tornado if the library is installed. To request its use explicitly, the async_mode option can be given in the constructor:
sio = socketio.AsyncServer(async_mode='tornado')
A server configured for Tornado must include a request handler for Socket.IO:
app = tornado.web.Application(
[
(r"/socket.io/", socketio.get_tornado_handler(sio)),
],
# ... other application options )
The Tornado application can define other routes that will coexist with the Socket.IO server. A typical pattern is to add routes that serve a client application and any associated static files.
The Tornado application is then executed in the usual manner:
app.listen(port) tornado.ioloop.IOLoop.current().start()
Eventlet¶
NOTE:
Eventlet is a high performance concurrent networking library for Python that uses coroutines, enabling code to be written in the same style used with the blocking standard library functions. An Socket.IO server deployed with eventlet has access to the long-polling and WebSocket transports.
Instances of class socketio.Server will automatically use eventlet for asynchronous operations if the library is installed. To request its use explicitly, the async_mode option can be given in the constructor:
sio = socketio.Server(async_mode='eventlet')
A server configured for eventlet is deployed as a regular WSGI application using the provided socketio.WSGIApp:
import eventlet app = socketio.WSGIApp(sio) eventlet.wsgi.server(eventlet.listen(('', 8000)), app)
Eventlet with Gunicorn¶
An alternative to running the eventlet WSGI server as above is to use gunicorn, a fully featured pure Python web server. The command to launch the application under gunicorn is shown below:
$ gunicorn -k eventlet -w 1 module:app
See the Gunicorn section above for information on how to use Gunicorn with multiple workers.
Eventlet provides a monkey_patch() function that replaces all the blocking functions in the standard library with equivalent asynchronous versions. While python-socketio does not require monkey patching, other libraries such as database drivers are likely to require it.
Sanic¶
NOTE:
Using a Message Queue¶
When working with distributed applications, it is often necessary to access the functionality of the Socket.IO from multiple processes. There are two specific use cases:
- Highly available applications may want to use horizontal scaling of the Socket.IO server to be able to handle very large number of concurrent clients.
- Applications that use work queues such as Celery may need to emit an event to a client once a background job completes. The most convenient place to carry out this task is the worker process that handled this job.
As a solution to the above problems, the Socket.IO server can be configured to connect to a message queue such as Redis or RabbitMQ, to communicate with other related Socket.IO servers or auxiliary workers.
Redis¶
To use a Redis message queue, a Python Redis client must be installed:
# socketio.Server class pip install redis
The Redis queue is configured through the socketio.RedisManager and socketio.AsyncRedisManager classes. These classes connect directly to the Redis store and use the queue's pub/sub functionality:
# socketio.Server class mgr = socketio.RedisManager('redis://') sio = socketio.Server(client_manager=mgr) # socketio.AsyncServer class mgr = socketio.AsyncRedisManager('redis://') sio = socketio.AsyncServer(client_manager=mgr)
The client_manager argument instructs the server to connect to the given message queue, and to coordinate with other processes connected to the queue.
Kombu¶
Kombu is a Python package that provides access to RabbitMQ and many other message queues. It can be installed with pip:
pip install kombu
To use RabbitMQ or other AMQP protocol compatible queues, that is the only required dependency. But for other message queues, Kombu may require additional packages. For example, to use a Redis queue via Kombu, the Python package for Redis needs to be installed as well:
pip install redis
The queue is configured through the socketio.KombuManager:
mgr = socketio.KombuManager('amqp://') sio = socketio.Server(client_manager=mgr)
The connection URL passed to the KombuManager constructor is passed directly to Kombu's Connection object, so the Kombu documentation should be consulted for information on how to build the correct URL for a given message queue.
Note that Kombu currently does not support asyncio, so it cannot be used with the socketio.AsyncServer class.
Kafka¶
Apache Kafka is supported through the kafka-python package:
pip install kafka-python
Access to Kafka is configured through the socketio.KafkaManager class:
mgr = socketio.KafkaManager('kafka://') sio = socketio.Server(client_manager=mgr)
Note that Kafka currently does not support asyncio, so it cannot be used with the socketio.AsyncServer class.
AioPika¶
A RabbitMQ message queue is supported in asyncio applications through the AioPika package:: You need to install aio_pika with pip:
pip install aio_pika
The RabbitMQ queue is configured through the socketio.AsyncAioPikaManager class:
mgr = socketio.AsyncAioPikaManager('amqp://') sio = socketio.AsyncServer(client_manager=mgr)
Horizontal Scaling¶
Socket.IO is a stateful protocol, which makes horizontal scaling more difficult. When deploying a cluster of Socket.IO processes, all processes must connect to the message queue by passing the client_manager argument to the server instance. This enables the workers to communicate and coordinate complex operations such as broadcasts.
If the long-polling transport is used, then there are two additional requirements that must be met:
- Each Socket.IO process must be able to handle multiple requests concurrently. This is needed because long-polling clients send two requests in parallel. Worker processes that can only handle one request at a time are not supported.
- The load balancer must be configured to always forward requests from a client to the same worker process, so that all requests coming from a client are handled by the same node. Load balancers call this sticky sessions, or session affinity.
Emitting from external processes¶
To have a process other than a server connect to the queue to emit a message, the same client manager classes can be used as standalone objects. In this case, the write_only argument should be set to True to disable the creation of a listening thread, which only makes sense in a server. For example:
# connect to the redis queue as an external process external_sio = socketio.RedisManager('redis://', write_only=True) # emit an event external_sio.emit('my event', data={'foo': 'bar'}, room='my room')
A limitation of the write-only client manager object is that it cannot receive callbacks when emitting. When the external process needs to receive callbacks, using a client to connect to the server with read and write support is a better option than a write-only client manager.
API REFERENCE¶
- Index
- Module Index
- Search Page
AUTHOR¶
Miguel Grinberg
COPYRIGHT¶
2018, Miguel Grinberg
May 19, 2025 |