MCPcopy
hub / github.com/joewalnes/websocketd

github.com/joewalnes/websocketd @v0.4.1 sqlite

repository ↗ · DeepWiki ↗ · release v0.4.1 ↗
91 symbols 222 edges 28 files 14 documented · 15%
README

websocketd

websocketd is a small command-line tool that will wrap an existing command-line interface program, and allow it to be accessed via a WebSocket.

WebSocket-capable applications can now be built very easily. As long as you can write an executable program that reads STDIN and writes to STDOUT, you can build a WebSocket server. Do it in Python, Ruby, Perl, Bash, .NET, C, Go, PHP, Java, Clojure, Scala, Groovy, Expect, Awk, VBScript, Haskell, Lua, R, whatever! No networking libraries necessary.

-@joewalnes

Details

Upon startup, websocketd will start a WebSocket server on a specified port, and listen for connections.

Upon a connection, it will fork the appropriate process, and disconnect the process when the WebSocket connection closes (and vice-versa).

Any message sent from the WebSocket client will be piped to the process's STDIN stream, followed by a \n newline.

Any text printed by the process to STDOUT shall be sent as a WebSocket message whenever a \n newline is encountered.

Download

If you're on a Mac, you can install websocketd using Homebrew. Just run brew install websocketd. For other operating systems, or if you don't want to use Homebrew, check out the link below.

Download for Linux, OS X and Windows

Quickstart

To get started, we'll create a WebSocket endpoint that will accept connections, then send back messages, counting to 10 with 1 second pause between each one, before disconnecting.

To show how simple it is, let's do it in Bash!

count.sh:

#!/bin/bash
for ((COUNT = 1; COUNT <= 10; COUNT++)); do
  echo $COUNT
  sleep 1
done

Before turning it into a WebSocket server, let's test it from the command line. The beauty of websocketd is that servers work equally well in the command line, or in shell scripts, as they do in the server - with no modifications required.

$ chmod +x count.sh
$ ./count.sh
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10

Now let's turn it into a WebSocket server:

$ websocketd --port=8080 ./count.sh

Finally, let's create a web-page to test it.

count.html:

<!DOCTYPE html>
<pre id="log"></pre>
<script>
  // helper function: log message to screen
  function log(msg) {
    document.getElementById('log').textContent += msg + '\n';
  }

  // setup websocket with callbacks
  var ws = new WebSocket('ws://localhost:8080/');
  ws.onopen = function() {
    log('CONNECT');
  };
  ws.onclose = function() {
    log('DISCONNECT');
  };
  ws.onmessage = function(event) {
    log('MESSAGE: ' + event.data);
  };
</script>

Open this page in your web-browser. It will even work if you open it directly from disk using a file:// URL.

More Features

  • Very simple install. Just download the single executable for Linux, Mac or Windows and run it. Minimal dependencies, no installers, no package managers, no external libraries. Suitable for development and production servers.
  • Server side scripts can access details about the WebSocket HTTP request (e.g. remote host, query parameters, cookies, path, etc) via standard CGI environment variables.
  • As well as serving websocket daemons it also includes a static file server and classic CGI server for convenience.
  • Command line help available via websocketd --help.
  • Includes WebSocket developer console to make it easy to test your scripts before you've built a JavaScript frontend.
  • Examples in many programming languages are available to help you getting started.

User Manual

More documentation in the user manual

Example Projects

Got more examples? Open a pull request.

My Other Projects

And follow @joewalnes!

Extension points exported contracts — how you extend this code

Endpoint (Interface)
(no doc) [3 implementers]
libwebsocketd/endpoint.go
LogFunc (FuncType)
(no doc)
libwebsocketd/logscope.go

Core symbols most depended-on inside this repo

Error
called by 35
libwebsocketd/logscope.go
appendEnv
called by 22
libwebsocketd/env.go
Debug
called by 16
libwebsocketd/logscope.go
Access
called by 15
libwebsocketd/logscope.go
ShortHelp
called by 11
help.go
String
called by 9
config.go
Info
called by 8
libwebsocketd/logscope.go
Associate
called by 7
libwebsocketd/logscope.go

Shape

Method 37
Function 36
Struct 12
Class 2
TypeAlias 2
FuncType 1
Interface 1

Languages

Go95%
Java4%
TypeScript1%

Modules by API surface

libwebsocketd/logscope.go15 symbols
libwebsocketd/process_endpoint.go10 symbols
libwebsocketd/http.go10 symbols
libwebsocketd/handler.go8 symbols
libwebsocketd/endpoint_test.go8 symbols
libwebsocketd/websocket_endpoint.go7 symbols
libwebsocketd/endpoint.go6 symbols
config.go5 symbols
help.go4 symbols
libwebsocketd/http_test.go3 symbols
main.go2 symbols
libwebsocketd/launcher.go2 symbols

Dependencies from manifests, versioned

For agents

$ claude mcp add websocketd \
  -- python -m otcore.mcp_server <graph>

⬇ download graph artifact