NodeJs TCP client bufferSize to call multiple `data` event? - node.js

I just noticed that there is a bufferSize in NodeJs TCP Client which you can limit the incoming buffer to the TCP client.
So my question is that if I set the bufferSize in the client side to 1 byte and send 16 bytes from server, should I get 16 different data event in the client?

The bufferSize you're referring to is a read-only property of writable streams:
Object.defineProperty(Socket.prototype, 'bufferSize', {
get: function() {
if (this._handle) {
return this._handle.writeQueueSize + this._writableState.length;
}
}
});
(correct me if you're talking about something else)
If you want to control how your client receives data, you should set your stream in non-flowing mode:
readable.on('readable', function() {
var chunk;
while (null !== (chunk = readable.read())) {
console.log('got %d bytes of data', chunk.length);
}
});
(see doc)
You can pass readable.read(5) if you want to read just 5 bytes. The stream will be in non-flowing mode by default unless you attach a 'data' event (so don't do it in your case).

Related

native websocket api NodeJS for larger messages?

I was following an article about writing a socket server from scratch, and its mostly working with small frames / packages, but when I try to send about 2kb of data, I get this error:
.
internal/buffer.js:77
throw new ERR_OUT_OF_RANGE(type || 'offset',
^
RangeError [ERR_OUT_OF_RANGE]: The value of "offset" is out of range. It must be >= 0 and <= 7. Receive
d 8
at boundsError (internal/buffer.js:77:9)
at Buffer.readUInt8 (internal/buffer.js:243:5)
at pm (/home/users/me/main.js:277:24)
at Socket.<anonymous> (/home/users/me/main.js:149:15)
at Socket.emit (events.js:315:20)
at addChunk (_stream_readable.js:297:12)
at readableAddChunk (_stream_readable.js:273:9)
at Socket.Readable.push (_stream_readable.js:214:10)
at TCP.onStreamRead (internal/stream_base_commons.js:186:23) {
code: 'ERR_OUT_OF_RANGE'
}
Here's my server code (some details were changed for security, but here it is in its entirety for the line numbers etc.) but the relevant part here is the function pm [=parseMessage](towards the bottom):
let http = require('http'),
ch = require("child_process"),
crypto = require("crypto"),
fs = require("fs"),
password = fs.readFileSync(“./secretPasswordFile.txt”),
callbacks = {
CHANGEDforSecUrITY(m, cs) {
if(m.password === password) {
if(m.command) {
try {
cs.my = ch.exec(
m.command,
(
err,
stdout,
stderr
) => {
cs.write(ans(s({
err,
stdout,
stderr
})));
}
);
} catch(e) {
cs.write(ans(
s({
error: e.toString()
})
))
}
}
if(m.exit) {
console.log("LOL", cs.my);
if(cs.my && typeof cs.my.kill === "function") {
cs.my.kill();
console.log(cs.my, "DID?");
}
}
cs.write(
ans(
s({
hi: 2,
youSaid:m
}))
)
} else {
cs.write(ans(s({
hey: "wrong password!!"
})))
}
console.log("hi!",m)
}
},
banned = [
"61.19.71.84"
],
server = http.createServer(
(q,r)=> {
if(banned.includes(q.connection.remoteAddress)) {
r.end("Hey man, " + q.connection.remoteAddress,
"I know you're there!!");
} else {
ch.exec(`sudo "$(which node)" -p "console.log(4)"`)
console.log(q.url)
console.log(q.connection.remoteAddress,q.connection.remotePort)
let path = q.url.substring(1)
q.url == "/" &&
(path = "index.html")
q.url == "/secret" &&
(path = "../main.js")
fs.readFile(
"./static/" + path,
(er, f) => {
if(er) {
r.end("<h2>404!!</h2>");
} else {
r.end(f);
}
}
)
}
}
)
server.listen(
process.env.PORT || 80,
c=> {
console.log(c,"helo!!!")
server.on("upgrade", (req, socket) => {
if(req.headers["upgrade"] !== "websocket") {
socket.end("HTTP/1.1 400 Bad Request");
return;
}
let key = req.headers["sec-websocket-key"];
if(key) {
let hash = gav(key)
let headers = [
"HTTP/1.1 101 Web Socket Protocol Handshake",
"Upgrade: WebSocket",
"Connection: Upgrade",
`Sec-WebSocket-Accept: ${hash}`
];
let protocol = req.headers[
"sec-websocket-protocol"
];
let protocols = (
protocol &&
protocol.split(",")
.map(s => s.trim())
|| []
);
protocols.includes("json") &&
headers
.push("Sec-WebSocket-Protocol: json");
let headersStr = (
headers.join("\r\n") +
"\r\n\r\n"
)
console.log(
"Stuff happening",
req.headers,
headersStr
);
fs.writeFileSync("static/logs.txt",headersStr);
socket.write(
headersStr
);
socket.write(ans(JSON.stringify(
{
hello: "world!!!"
}
)))
}
socket.on("data", buf => {
let msg = pm(buf);
console.log("HEY MAN!",msg)
if(msg) {
console.log("GOT!",msg);
for(let k in msg) {
if(callbacks[k]) {
callbacks[k](
msg[k],
socket
)
}
}
} else {
console.log("nope");
}
});
});
}
)
function pm(buf) {
/*
*structure of first byte:
1: if its the last frame in buffer
2 - 4: reserved bits
5 - 8: a number which shows what type of message it is. Chart:
"0": means we continue
"1": means this frame contains text
"2": means this is binary
"0011"(3) - "0111" (11): reserved values
"1000"(8): means connection closed
"1001"(9): ping (checking for response)
"1010"(10): pong (response verified)
"1010"(11) - "1111"(15): reserved for "control" frames
structure of second byte:
1: is it "masked"
2 - 8: length of payload, if less than 126.
if 126, 2 additional bytes are added
if 127 (or more), 6 additional bytes added (total 8)
* */
const myFirstByte = buf.readUInt8(0);
const isThisFinalFrame = isset(myFirstByte,7) //first bit
const [
reserved1,
reserved2,
reserved3
] = [
isset(myFirstByte, 6),
isset(myFirstByte, 5),
isset(myFirstByte, 4) //reserved bits
]
const opcode = myFirstByte & parseInt("1111",2); //checks last 4 bits
//check if closed connection ("1000"(8))
if(opcode == parseInt("1000", 2))
return null; //shows that connection closed
//look for text frame ("0001"(1))
if(opcode == parseInt("0001",2)) {
const theSecondByte = buf.readUInt8(1);
const isMasked = isset(theSecondByte, 7) //1st bit from left side
let currentByteOffset = 2; //we are theSecondByte now, so 2
let payloadLength = theSecondByte & 127; //chcek up to 7 bits
if(payloadLength > 125) {
if(payloadLength === 126) {
payloadLength = buf.readUInt16BE(
currentByteOffset
) //read next two bytes from position
currentByteOffset += 2; //now we left off at
//the fourth byte, so thats where we are
} else {
//if only the second byte is full,
//that shows that there are 6 more
//bytes to hold the length
const right = buf.readUInt32BE(
currentByteOffset
);
const left = buf.readUInt32BE(
currentByteOffset + 4 //the 8th byte ??
);
throw new Error("brutal " + currentByteOffset);
}
}
//if we have masking byte set to 1, get masking key
//
//
//now that we have the lengths
//and possible masks, read the rest
//of the bytes, for actual data
const data = Buffer.alloc(payloadLength);
if(isMasked) {
//can't just copy it,
//have to do some stuff with
//the masking key and this thing called
//"XOR" to the data. Complicated
//formulas, llook into later
//
let maskingBytes = Buffer.allocUnsafe(4);
buf.copy(
maskingBytes,
0,
currentByteOffset,
currentByteOffset + 4
);
currentByteOffset += 4;
for(
let i = 0;
i < payloadLength;
++i
) {
const source = buf.readUInt8(
currentByteOffset++
);
//now mask the source with masking byte
data.writeUInt8(
source ^ maskingBytes[i & 3],
i
);
}
} else {
//just copy bytes directly to our buffer
buf.copy(
data,
0,
currentByteOffset++
);
}
//at this point we have the actual data, so make a json
//
const json = data.toString("utf8");
return p(json);
} else {
return "LOL IDK?!";
}
}
function p(str) {
try {
return JSON.parse(str);
} catch(e){
return str
}
}
function s(ob) {
try {
return JSON.stringify(ob);
} catch(e) {
return e.toString();
}
}
function ans(str) {
const byteLength = Buffer.byteLength(str);
const lengthByteCount = byteLength < 126 ? 0 : 2;
const payloadLength = lengthByteCount === 0 ? byteLength : 126;
const buffer = Buffer.alloc(
2 +
lengthByteCount +
byteLength
);
buffer.writeUInt8(
parseInt("10000001",2), //opcode is "1", at firstbyte
0
);
buffer.writeUInt8(payloadLength, 1); //at second byte
let currentByteOffset = 2; //already wrote second byte by now
if(lengthByteCount > 0) {
buffer.writeUInt16BE(
byteLength,
2 //more length at 3rd byte position
);
currentByteOffset += lengthByteCount; //which is 2 more bytes
//of length, since not supporting more than that
}
buffer.write(str, currentByteOffset); //the rest of the bytes
//are the actual data, see chart in function pm
//
return buffer;
}
function gav(ak) {
return crypto
.createHash("sha1")
.update(ak +'258EAFA5-E914-47DA-95CA-C5AB0DC85B11', "binary")
.digest("base64")
}
function isset(b, k) {
return !!(
b >>> k & 1
)
}
Given that this error does not happen with smaller packets, I'm taking an educated guess that this is due to the limitations of the code here, as mentioned in the offical RFC documentation:
5.4. Fragmentation
The primary purpose of fragmentation is to allow sending a message
that is of unknown size when the message is started without having to
buffer that message. If messages couldn't be fragmented, then an
endpoint would have to buffer the entire message so its length could
be counted before the first byte is sent. With fragmentation, a
server or intermediary may choose a reasonable size buffer and, when
the buffer is full, write a fragment to the network.
A secondary use-case for fragmentation is for multiplexing, where
it is not desirable for a large message on one logical channel to
monopolize the output channel, so the multiplexing needs to be free to
split the message into smaller fragments to better share the output
channel. (Note that the multiplexing extension is not described in
this document.)
Unless specified otherwise by an extension, frames have no semantic
meaning. An intermediary might coalesce and/or split frames, if no
extensions were negotiated by the client and the server or if some
extensions were negotiated, but the intermediary understood all the
extensions negotiated and knows how to coalesce and/or split frames
in the presence of these extensions. One implication of this is that
in absence of extensions, senders and receivers must not depend on
the presence of specific frame boundaries.
The following rules apply to fragmentation:
o An unfragmented message consists of a single frame with the FIN
bit set (Section 5.2) and an opcode other than 0.
o A fragmented message consists of a single frame with the FIN bit
clear and an opcode other than 0, followed by zero or more frames
with the FIN bit clear and the opcode set to 0, and terminated by
a single frame with the FIN bit set and an opcode of 0. A
fragmented message is conceptually equivalent to a single larger
message whose payload is equal to the concatenation of the
payloads of the fragments in order; however, in the presence of
extensions, this may not hold true as the extension defines the
interpretation of the "Extension data" present. For instance,
"Extension data" may only be present at the beginning of the first
fragment and apply to subsequent fragments, or there may be
"Extension data" present in each of the fragments that applies
only to that particular fragment. In the absence of "Extension
data", the following example demonstrates how fragmentation works.
EXAMPLE: For a text message sent as three fragments, the first
fragment would have an opcode of 0x1 and a FIN bit clear, the
second fragment would have an opcode of 0x0 and a FIN bit clear,
and the third fragment would have an opcode of 0x0 and a FIN bit
that is set.
o Control frames (see Section 5.5) MAY be injected in the middle
of
a fragmented message. Control frames themselves MUST NOT be
fragmented.
o Message fragments MUST be delivered to the recipient in the
order
sent by the sender. o The fragments of one message MUST NOT be interleaved between the
fragments of another message unless an extension has been
negotiated that can interpret the interleaving.
o An endpoint MUST be capable of handling control frames in the
middle of a fragmented message.
o A sender MAY create fragments of any size for non-control
messages.
o Clients and servers MUST support receiving both fragmented and
unfragmented messages.
o As control frames cannot be fragmented, an intermediary MUST NOT
attempt to change the fragmentation of a control frame.
o An intermediary MUST NOT change the fragmentation of a message
if
any reserved bit values are used and the meaning of these values
is not known to the intermediary.
o An intermediary MUST NOT change the fragmentation of any message
in the context of a connection where extensions have been
negotiated and the intermediary is not aware of the semantics of
the negotiated extensions. Similarly, an intermediary that didn't
see the WebSocket handshake (and wasn't notified about its
content) that resulted in a WebSocket connection MUST NOT change
the fragmentation of any message of such connection.
o As a consequence of these rules, all fragments of a message are
of
the same type, as set by the first fragment's opcode. Since
control frames cannot be fragmented, the type for all fragments in
a message MUST be either text, binary, or one of the reserved
opcodes.
NOTE: If control frames could not be interjected, the latency of a
ping, for example, would be very long if behind a large message.
Hence, the requirement of handling control frames in the middle of a
fragmented message.
IMPLEMENTATION NOTE: In the absence of any extension, a receiver
doesn't have to buffer the whole frame in order to process it. For
example, if a streaming API is used, a part of a frame can be
delivered to the application. However, note that this assumption
might not hold true for all future WebSocket extensions.
In the words of the article above:
Alignment of Node.js socket buffers with WebSocket message frames
Node.js socket data (I’m talking about net.Socket in this case, not
WebSockets) is received in buffered chunks. These are split apart with
no regard for where your WebSocket frames begin or end!
What this means is that if your server is receiving large messages
fragmented into multiple WebSocket frames, or receiving large numbers
of messages in rapid succession, there’s no guarantee that each data
buffer received by the Node.js socket will align with the start and
end of the byte data that makes up a given frame.
So, as you’re parsing each buffer received by the socket, you’ll need
to keep track of where one frame ends and where the next begins.
You’ll need to be sure that you’ve received all of the bytes of data
for a frame — before you can safely consume that frame’s data.
It may be that one frame ends midway through the same buffer in which
the next frame begins. It also may be that a frame is split across
several buffers that will be received in succession.
The following diagram is an exaggerated illustration of the issue. In
most cases, frames tend to fit inside a buffer. Due to the way the
data arrives, you’ll often find that a frame will start and end in
line with the start and end of the socket buffer. But this can’t be
relied upon in all cases, and must be considered during
implementation. This can take
some work to get right.
For the basic implementation that follows below, I have skipped any
code for handling large messages or messages split across multiple
frames.
So my problem here is that the article skipped the fragmentation code, which is kind of what I need to know... but in that RFC documentation, some examples of fragmentated and unfragmented packets are given:
5.6. Data Frames
Data frames (e.g., non-control frames) are identified by opcodes
where the most significant bit of the opcode is 0. Currently defined
opcodes for data frames include 0x1 (Text), 0x2 (Binary). Opcodes
0x3-0x7 are reserved for further non-control frames yet to be
defined.
Data frames carry application-layer and/or extension-layer data.
The opcode determines the interpretation of the data:
Text
The "Payload data" is text data encoded as UTF-8. Note that a
particular text frame might include a partial UTF-8 sequence;
however, the whole message MUST contain valid UTF-8. Invalid
UTF-8 in reassembled messages is handled as described in
Section 8.1.
Binary
The "Payload data" is arbitrary binary data whose interpretation
is solely up to the application layer.
5.7. Examples
o A single-frame unmasked text message
* 0x81 0x05 0x48 0x65 0x6c 0x6c 0x6f (contains "Hello")
o A single-frame masked text message
* 0x81 0x85 0x37 0xfa 0x21 0x3d 0x7f 0x9f 0x4d 0x51 0x58
(contains "Hello")
o A fragmented unmasked text message
* 0x01 0x03 0x48 0x65 0x6c (contains "Hel")
* 0x80 0x02 0x6c 0x6f (contains "lo")
o Unmasked Ping request and masked Ping response
* 0x89 0x05 0x48 0x65 0x6c 0x6c 0x6f (contains a body of "Hello",
but the contents of the body are arbitrary)
* 0x8a 0x85 0x37 0xfa 0x21 0x3d 0x7f 0x9f 0x4d 0x51 0x58
(contains a body of "Hello", matching the body of the ping)
o 256 bytes binary message in a single unmasked frame
* 0x82 0x7E 0x0100 [256 bytes of binary data]
o 64KiB binary message in a single unmasked frame
* 0x82 0x7F 0x0000000000010000 [65536 bytes of binary data]
So it would appear that is an example of a fragment.
Also this seems relevant:
6.2. Receiving Data
To receive WebSocket data, an endpoint listens on the underlying
network connection. Incoming data MUST be parsed as WebSocket frames
as defined in Section 5.2. If a control frame (Section 5.5) is
received, the frame MUST be handled as defined by Section 5.5. Upon
receiving a data frame (Section 5.6), the endpoint MUST note the
/type/ of the data as defined by the opcode (frame-opcode) from
Section 5.2. The "Application data" from this frame is defined as
the /data/ of the message. If the frame comprises an unfragmented
message (Section 5.4), it is said that A WebSocket Message Has Been
Received with type /type/ and data /data/. If the frame is part of
a fragmented message, the "Application data" of the subsequent data
frames is concatenated to form the /data/. When the last fragment is
received as indicated by the FIN bit (frame-fin), it is said that A
WebSocket Message Has Been Received with data /data/ (comprised of
the concatenation of the "Application data" of the fragments) and type
/type/ (noted from the first frame of the fragmented message).
Subsequent data frames MUST be interpreted as belonging to a new
WebSocket message.
Extensions (Section 9) MAY change the semantics of how data is
read, specifically including what comprises a message boundary.
Extensions, in addition to adding "Extension data" before the
"Application data" in a payload, MAY also modify the "Application
data" (such as by compressing it).
The problem:
I don't know how to check for fragments and line them up with the node buffers, as mentioned in the article, I'm only able to read very small buffer amounts.
How can I parse larger data chunks using the fragmentation methods mentioned in the RFC documentation and the lining-up of nodeJS buffers alluded to (but not explained) in the article?
I came across your question when I was working on my own "pure NodeJs WebSocket server". All worked fine for payloads less than 1-2 KiB. When I was trying to send more, but still within [64 KiB - 1] limit (16 bit payload length), it randomly blow up the server with ERR_OUT_OF_RANGE error.
Side note: https://medium.com/hackernoon/implementing-a-websocket-server-with-node-js-d9b78ec5ffa8 "Implementing a WebSocket server with Node.js" by Srushtika Neelakantam is excellent article! Before I found it the WebSocket was alwas a black box to me. She described very simple and easy to understand implementation of WebSocket client/server from scratch. Unfortunately it lacks (on purpose to not make article hard) support for larger payloads and buffers alignment. I just wanted to give Srushtika Neelakantam credit because without her article I would never write my own pure NodeJs WebSocket server.
The solution described in the article fails only because the NodeJs buffer is simply over and there are no more bytes to read but the function's logic expects more bytes. You end with ERR_OUT_OF_RANGE error. Code simply wants to read bytes that are not yet available but will be available in next 'data' event.
The solution to this problem is simply check if the next byte that you want to read from buffer is really available. As long as there are bytes you are fine. The challenge starts when there to less bytes or to much bytes. In order to be be more flexible the function that parses buffer should return not only payload but pair: payload and bufferRemainingBytes. It will allow to concat the buffers in the main data event handler.
We need to handle three cases:
When there is exactly the right amount of bytes in the buffer to build valid WebSocket frame we return
{ payload: payloadFromValidWebSocketFrame, bufferRemainingBytes: Buffer.alloc(0) }
When there are enough bytes to build valid WebSocket but still there are few left in the buffer we return
{ payload: payloadFromValidWebSocketFrame, bufferRemainingBytes: bufferBytesAfterValidWebSocketFrame }
This case also forces us to wrap all getParsedBuffer calls with a do-while loop. The bufferRemainingBytes could still contain second (or third, or more) valid WebSocket frame. We need to parse them all in currently processed socket data event.
When there are not enough bytes to build valid WebSocket frame we return empty payload and entire buffer as bufferRemainingBytes
{ payload: null, bufferRemainingBytes: buffer }
How to merge buffers together with bufferRemainingBytes in the subsequent socket data events? Here is the code:
server.on('upgrade', (req, socket) => {
let bufferToParse = Buffer.alloc(0); // at the beginning we just start with 0 bytes
// .........
socket.on('data', buffer => {
let parsedBuffer;
// concat 'past' bytes with the 'current' bytes
bufferToParse = Buffer.concat([bufferToParse, buffer]);
do {
parsedBuffer = getParsedBuffer(bufferToParse);
// the output of the debugBuffer calls will be on the screenshot later
debugBuffer('buffer', buffer);
debugBuffer('bufferToParse', bufferToParse);
debugBuffer('parsedBuffer.payload', parsedBuffer.payload);
debugBuffer('parsedBuffer.bufferRemainingBytes', parsedBuffer.bufferRemainingBytes);
bufferToParse = parsedBuffer.bufferRemainingBytes;
if (parsedBuffer.payload) {
// .........
// handle the payload as you like, for example send to other sockets
}
} while (parsedBuffer.payload && parsedBuffer.bufferRemainingBytes.length);
console.log('----------------------------------------------------------------\n');
});
// .........
});
Here is how my getParsedBuffer function looks like(it was called parseMessage in the article):
const getParsedBuffer = buffer => {
// .........
// whenever I want to read X bytes I simply check if I really can read X bytes
if (currentOffset + 2 > buffer.length) {
return { payload: null, bufferRemainingBytes: buffer };
}
payloadLength = buffer.readUInt16BE(currentOffset);
currentOffset += 2;
// .........
// in 99% of cases this will prevent the ERR_OUT_OF_RANGE error to happen
if (currentOffset + payloadLength > buffer.length) {
console.log('[misalignment between WebSocket frame and NodeJs Buffer]\n');
return { payload: null, bufferRemainingBytes: buffer };
}
payload = Buffer.alloc(payloadLength);
if (isMasked) {
// ......... I skip masked code as it's too long and not masked shows the idea same way
} else {
for (let i = 0; i < payloadLength; i++) {
payload.writeUInt8(buffer.readUInt8(currentOffset++), i);
}
}
// it could also happen at this point that we already have a valid WebSocket payload
// but there are still some bytes remaining in the buffer
// we need to copy all unused bytes and return them as bufferRemainingBytes
bufferRemainingBytes = Buffer.alloc(buffer.length - currentOffset);
// ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ this value could be >= 0
for (let i = 0; i < bufferRemainingBytes.length; i++) {
bufferRemainingBytes.writeUInt8(buffer.readUInt8(currentOffset++), i);
}
return { payload, bufferRemainingBytes };
}
Real life test of the described solution (64 KiB - 1 bytes):
In short - the above solution should work fine with payloads up to [64 KiB - 1] bytes. It's written entirely in pure NodeJs without any external library. I guess that is what you were looking for in your project ;)
Please find below the links to full version of my Binary Broadcast App on GitHub gist:
server https://gist.github.com/robertrypula/b813ffe23a9489bae1b677f1608676c8
client https://gist.github.com/robertrypula/f8da8f89819068a97bef4f27d04ad5b7
For some time (before I deploy the updated app with more features) the live demo of above's gist can be found here:
http://sndu.pl - let's send you the file
this is not perfect answer but an approach. this is how i would do what you are trying to do. i m writing pseudo code just to save time ;)
first i will be creating a custom object to communicate :
class Request {
id?: string; // unique id of the request, same request id can be used to continue a requst or to reply to a request
api?: string; // the request type i.e. what kind of request it is or how do you want this data to be used like a client can perform multiple operations on server like API_AUTH or API_CREATE_FILE etc.
complete?: boolean; // this is a flag if the request is complete or it needs to be added to the queue to wait for more data
error?: boolean; // this flag ll be helpful in request replies when the server has processed the request for an api and wants to respond with error or success
message?: string; // just sample message that can be shown or helpful raw note for the developer to debug
data?: any; // this is the actual data being sent
}
now for communicating between both the sides(i m taking server client approach in this example) we ll use this object.
now here is some pseudo code about how to process on server
class Server {
requestQueue: Map<string, Request> = new Map();
onRequestReceived(request: Request) {
if(request !== undefined){
switch(request.api){
case "API_LONG_DATA":
if(this.requestQueue.get(request.id) !== undefined){
if(request.complete){
// add this data to the requests in the querue, process the request and remove it from the queue
}else{
// add data to the request in the queue and resave it to the map
}
}else{
if(request.complete){
// process your request here
}else{
// add this request to queue
}
}
break;
case "API_AUTH":
// just a sample api
break;
}
}else{
// respond with error
}
}
}
this is easier than playing with buffers i believe and even i have used this approach a lot many times and sending large chunk of data is not a good practice because it can be used by someone to exploit your resources and it might fail in low networks.
so hope you get some hints from my approach ;)
UPDATE[full implementation]
first we need websoket package so
npm install websocket
now this is how we create websocket server in node.js using websocket package and process incoming requests
server.ts
import { WebSocketServer } from 'websocket';
import * as http from 'http';
// this is the request data object which ll serve as a common data entity that both server and client are aware of
class Request {
id?: string; // unique id of the request, same request id can be used to continue a requst or to reply to a request
api?: string; // the request type i.e. what kind of request it is or how do you want this data to be used like a client can perform multiple operations on server like API_AUTH or API_CREATE_FILE etc.
complete?: boolean; // this is a flag if the request is complete or it needs to be added to the queue to wait for more data
error?: boolean; // this flag ll be helpful in request replies when the server has processed the request for an api and wants to respond with error or success
message?: string; // just sample message that can be shown or helpful raw note for the developer to debug
data?: any; // this is the actual data being sent
}
// this is optional if you want to show 404 on the page
const server = http.createServer((request, response) => {
response.writeHead(404);
response.end();
});
server.listen(8080, function() {
console.log((new Date()) + ' Server is listening on port 8080');
});
const wsServer = new WebSocketServer({
httpServer: server,
autoAcceptConnections: false
});
function originIsAllowed(origin) {
// put logic here to detect whether the specified origin is allowed.
return true;
}
wsServer.on('request', (request) => {
if (originIsAllowed(request.origin)) {
const connection = request.accept('echo-protocol', request.origin);
// this is the request queue is there are any heavy request which cant fit into one request
const requestQueue: Map<string, Request> = new Map();
connection.on('message', (message) => {
// i consider that the data being sent to server is utf8 string
if (message.type === 'utf8') {
// here we construct the request object from incoming data
const request: Request = JSON.parse(message.utf8Data);
// here we process the request
switch(request.api){
case "API_LONG_DATA":
if(requestQueue.get(request.id) !== undefined){
if(request.complete){
// add this data to the requests in the querue, process the request and remove it from the queue
}else{
// add data to the request in the queue and resave it to the map
}
}else{
if(request.complete){
// process your request here
}else{
// add this request to queue
}
}
break;
case "API_AUTH":
// just a sample api
break;
}
}else{
// handle other data types
}
});
connection.on('close', (reasonCode, description) => {
// a connection as closed do cleanup here
});
}else{
// Make sure we only accept requests from an allowed origin
request.reject();
}
});
here is the way you send data from client
client.ts
import { WebSocketClient } from 'websocket';
// this is the request data object which ll serve as a common data entity that both server and client are aware of
class Request {
id?: string; // unique id of the request, same request id can be used to continue a requst or to reply to a request
api?: string; // the request type i.e. what kind of request it is or how do you want this data to be used like a client can perform multiple operations on server like API_AUTH or API_CREATE_FILE etc.
complete?: boolean; // this is a flag if the request is complete or it needs to be added to the queue to wait for more data
error?: boolean; // this flag ll be helpful in request replies when the server has processed the request for an api and wants to respond with error or success
message?: string; // just sample message that can be shown or helpful raw note for the developer to debug
data?: any; // this is the actual data being sent
}
const client = new WebSocketClient();
client.on('connectFailed', (error) => {
// handle error when connection failed
});
client.on('connect', (connection) => {
connection.on('error', (error)=> {
// handle when some error occurs in existing connection
});
connection.on('close', () => {
// connection closed
});
connection.on('message', function(message) {
// i m condsidering we are using utf8 data to communicate
if (message.type === 'utf8') {
// here we parse request object
const request: Request = JSON.parse(message.utf8Data);
// here you can handle the request object
}else{
// handle other data types
}
});
// here you start communicating with the server
// example 1. normal requst
const authRequest: Request = {
id: "auth_request_id",
api: "API_AUTH",
complete: true,
data: {
user: "testUser",
pass: "testUserPass"
}
}
connection.sendUTF(JSON.stringify(authRequest));
// example 2. long data request
const longRequestChunk1: Request = {
id: "long_chunck_request_id",
api: "API_LONG_CHUNCK",
complete: false, // observer this flag. as this is the first part of the chunk so this needs to be added to the queue on server
data: "..." // path one of long data
}
const longRequestChunk2: Request = {
id: "long_chunck_request_id", // request id must be the same
api: "API_LONG_CHUNCK", // same api
complete: true, // as this is the last part of the chunk so this flag is true
data: "..." // path one of long data
}
connection.sendUTF(JSON.stringify(longRequestChunk1));
connection.sendUTF(JSON.stringify(longRequestChunk2));
});
client.connect('ws://localhost:8080/', 'echo-protocol');
i can explain it furthure if you want ;)

NodeJs: Never emits "end" when reading a TCP Socket

I am pretty new to Node.Js and I'm using tcp sockets to communicate with a client. Since the received data is fragmented I noticed that it prints "ondata" to the console more than once. I need to be able to read all the data and concatenate it in order to implement the other functions. I read the following http://blog.nodejs.org/2012/12/20/streams2/ and thought I can use socket.on('end',...) for this purpose. But it never prints "end" to the console.
Here is my code:
Client.prototype.send = function send(req, cb) {
var self = this;
var buffer = protocol.encodeRequest(req);
var header = new Buffer(16);
var packet = Buffer.concat([ header, buffer ], 16 + buffer.length);
function cleanup() {
self.socket.removeListener('data', ondata);
self.socket.removeListener('error', onerror);
}
var body = '';
function ondata() {
var chunk = this.read() || '';
body += chunk;
console.log('ondata');
}
self.socket.on('readable', ondata);
self.socket.on('end', function() {
console.log('end');
});
function onerror(err) {
cleanup();
cb(err);
}
self.socket.on('error', onerror);
self.socket.write(packet);
};
The end event will handle the FIN package of the TCP protocol (in other words: will handle the close package)
Event: 'end'#
Emitted when the other end of the socket sends a FIN packet.
By default (allowHalfOpen == false) the socket will destroy its file descriptor once it has written out its pending write queue. However, by setting allowHalfOpen == true the socket will not automatically end() its side allowing the user to write arbitrary amounts of data, with the caveat that the user is required to end() their side now.
About FIN package: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transmission_Control_Protocol#Connection_termination
The solution
I understand your problem, the network communication have some data transfer gaps and it split your message in some packages. You just want read your fully content.
For solve this problem i will recommend you create a protocol. Just send a number with the size of your message before and while the size of your concatenated message was less than total of your message size, keep concatenating :)
I have created a lib yesterday to simplify that issue: https://www.npmjs.com/package/node-easysocket
I hope it helps :)

Nodejs: Set highWaterMark of socket object

is it possible to set the highWaterMark of a socket object after it was created:
var http = require('http');
var server = http.createServer();
server.on('upgrade', function(req, socket, head) {
socket.on('data', function(chunk) {
var frame = new WebSocketFrame(chunk);
// skip invalid frames
if (!frame.isValid()) return;
// if the length in the head is unequal to the chunk
// node has maybe split it
if (chunk.length != WebSocketFrame.getLength()) {
socket.once('data', listenOnMissingChunks);
});
});
});
function listenOnMissingChunks(chunk, frame) {
frame.addChunkToPayload(chunk);
if (WebSocketFrame.getLength()) {
// if still corrupted listen once more
} else {
// else proceed
}
}
The above code example does not work. But how do I do it instead?
Further explaination:
When I receive big WebSocket frames they get split into multiple data events. This makes it hard to parse the frames because I do not know if this is a splitted or corrupted frame.
I think you misunderstand the nature of a TCP socket. Despite the fact that TCP sends its data over IP packets, TCP is not a packet protocol. A TCP socket is simply a stream of data. Thus, it is incorrect to view the data event as a logical message. In other words, one socket.write on one end does not equate to a single data event on the other.
There are many reasons that a single write to a socket does not map 1:1 to a single data event:
The sender's network stack may combine multiple small writes into a single IP packet. (The Nagle algorithm)
An IP packet may be fragmented (split into multiple packets) along its journey if its size exceeds any one hop's MTU.
The receiver's network stack may combine multiple packets into a single data event (as seen by your application).
Because of this, a single data event might contain multiple messages, a single message, or only part of a message.
In order to correctly handle messages sent over a stream, you must buffer incoming data until you have a complete message.
var net = require('net');
var max = 1024 * 1024 // 1 MB, the maximum amount of data that we will buffer (prevent a bad server from crashing us by filling up RAM)
, allocate = 4096; // how much memory to allocate at once, 4 kB (there's no point in wasting 1 MB of RAM to buffer a few bytes)
, buffer=new Buffer(allocate) // create a new buffer that allocates 4 kB to start
, nread=0 // how many bytes we've buffered so far
, nproc=0 // how many bytes in the buffer we've processed (to avoid looping over the entire buffer every time data is received)
, client = net.connect({host:'example.com', port: 8124}); // connect to the server
client.on('data', function(chunk) {
if (nread + chunk.length > buffer.length) { // if the buffer is too small to hold the data
var need = Math.min(chunk.length, allocate); // allocate at least 4kB
if (nread + need > max) throw new Error('Buffer overflow'); // uh-oh, we're all full - TODO you'll want to handle this more gracefully
var newbuf = new Buffer(buffer.length + need); // because Buffers can't be resized, we must allocate a new one
buffer.copy(newbuf); // and copy the old one's data to the new one
buffer = newbuf; // the old, small buffer will be garbage collected
}
chunk.copy(buffer, nread); // copy the received chunk of data into the buffer
nread += chunk.length; // add this chunk's length to the total number of bytes buffered
pump(); // look at the buffer to see if we've received enough data to act
});
client.on('end', function() {
// handle disconnect
});
client.on('error', function(err) {
// handle errors
});
function find(byte) { // look for a specific byte in the buffer
for (var i = nproc; i < nread; i++) { // look through the buffer, starting from where we left off last time
if (buffer.readUInt8(i, true) == byte) { // we've found one
return i;
}
}
}
function slice(bytes) { // discard bytes from the beginning of a buffer
buffer = buffer.slice(bytes); // slice off the bytes
nread -= bytes; // note that we've removed bytes
nproc = 0; // and reset the processed bytes counter
}
function pump() {
var pos; // position of a NULL character
while ((pos = find(0x00)) >= 0) { // keep going while there's a NULL (0x00) somewhere in the buffer
if (pos == 0) { // if there's more than one NULL in a row, the buffer will now start with a NULL
slice(1); // discard it
continue; // so that the next iteration will start with data
}
process(buffer.slice(0,pos)); // hand off the message
slice(pos+1); // and slice the processed data off the buffer
}
}
function process(msg) { // here's where we do something with a message
if (msg.length > 0) { // ignore empty messages
// here's where you have to decide what to do with the data you've received
// experiment with the protocol
}
}
You don't need to. Incoming data will almost certainly be split across two or more reads: this is the nature of TCP and there is nothing you can do about it. Fiddling with obscure socket parameters certainly won't change it. And the data will be lit but certainly not corrupted. Just treat the socket as what it is: a byte stream.

How to handle CONTROL+C in node.js TCP server

how do I handle the CONTROL+C input in a node.js TCP server?
var server = net.createServer(function(c) {
c.on('end', function() {
console.log('Client disconnected');
});
c.on('data', function(data) {
if (data == "CONTROL+C") { // Here is the check
c.destroy();
}
});
}).listen(8124);
Control-C is a single byte, 0x03 (using an ASCII chart is kinda helpful).
However, whenever you're dealing with a socket connection you have to remember that you're going to receive data in a "chunked" fashion and the chunking does not necessarily correspond to the way the data was sent; you cannot assume that one send call on the client side corresponds to a single chunk on the server side. Therefore you can't assume that if the client sends a Control-C, it will be the only thing you receive in your data event. Some other data might come before it, and some other data might come after it, all in the same event. You will have to look for it inside your data.
From ebohlman's answer. It work.
c.on('data', function(data) {
if (data.toString().charCodeAt(0) === 3) {
c.destroy();
}
});

How to process a net.Stream using node.js?

I am trying to learn about streams in node.js!
server.js
var net = require("net");
var server = net.createServer(function(conn) {
conn.write("welcome!");
# echo the user input!
conn.pipe(conn);
});
server.listen("1111", function() {
console.log("port 1111 opened");
});
telnet test
The server currently echos the user's input
$ telnet localhost 1111
welcome!
hello
hello
desired output
To demonstrate where/how I should process the stream on the server side, I would like to wrap the user's input in {} before echoing it back
$ telnet localhost 1111
welcome!
hello
{hello}
This will basically accomplish the exact output you've requested:
var net = require('net');
var server = net.createServer(function(c) {
c.setEncoding('utf8');
c.on('data', function(d) {
c.write('{' + d.trim() + '}\n');
});
});
server.listen(9871);
First let me call your attention to c.setEncoding('utf8'). This will set a flag on the connection that will automatically convert the incoming Buffer to a String in the utf8 space. This works well for your example, but just note that for improved performance between Sockets it would be better to perform Buffer manipulations.
Simulating the entirety of .pipe() will take a bit more code.
.pipe() is a method of the Stream prototype, which can be found in lib/stream.js. If you take a look at the file you'll see quite a bit more code than what I've shown above. For demonstration, here's an excerpt:
function ondata(chunk) {
if (dest.writable) {
if (false === dest.write(chunk) && source.pause) {
source.pause();
}
}
}
source.on('data', ondata);
First a check is made if the destination is writable. If not, then there is no reason to attempt writing the data. Next the check if dest.write === false. From the documentation:
[.write] returns true if the entire data was flushed successfully to the kernel buffer. Returns false if all or part of the data was queued in user memory.
Since Streams live in kernel space, outside of the v8 memory space, it is possible to crash your machine by filling up memory (instead of just crashing the node app). So checking if the message has drained is a safety prevention mechanism. If it hasn't finished draining, then the source will be paused until the drain event is emitted. Here is the drain event:
function ondrain() {
if (source.readable && source.resume) {
source.resume();
}
}
dest.on('drain', ondrain);
Now there is a lot more we could cover with how .pipe() handles errors, cleans up its own event emitters, etc. but I think we've covered the basics.
Note: When sending a large string, it is possible that it will be sent in multiple packets. For this reason it may be necessary to do something like the following:
var net = require('net');
var server = net.createServer(function(c) {
var tmp = '';
c.setEncoding('utf8');
c.on('data', function(d) {
if (d.charCodeAt(d.length - 1) !== 10) {
tmp += d;
} else {
c.write('{' + tmp + d.trim() + '}\n');
tmp = '';
}
});
});
server.listen(9871);
Here we use the assumption that the string is ended by the new line character (\n, or ascii character code 10). We check the end of the message to see if this is the case. If not, then we temporarily store the message from the connection until the new line character is received.
This may not be a problem for your application, but thought it would be worth noting.
you can do something like
conn.on 'data', (d) ->
conn.write "{#{d}}"
the .pipe method is basically just attaching the data event of the input stream to write to the output stream
I'm not sure about net() actually, but I imagine it's quite similar to http:
http.createServer(function (req, res) {
res.writeHead(200, {'Content-Type': 'text/event-stream'});
http.get(options, function(resp){
resp.on('data', function(chunk){
res.write("event: meetup\n");
res.write("data: "+chunk.toString()+"\n\n");
});
}).on("error", function(e){
console.log("Got error: " + e.message);
});
});
https://github.com/chovy/nodejs-stream

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