OceanEx Slanger
The OceanEx Slanger inherits from the unmaintained Slanger. The project is backed by OceanEx dev team.
We will do regularly bug fixes and security updates.
We might further add more features or provide performance improvements for OceanEx Slanger. The maintenance will continue until we find better option.
Feel free to log any issue or contribute to the code base.
Important! OceanEx Slanger is not supposed to be included in your Gemfile. RubyGems is used as a distribution mechanism. If you include it in your app, you will likely get dependency conflicts. PRs updating dependencies for compatibility with your app will be closed!
OceanEx Slanger is a standalone server ruby implementation of the Pusher protocol. It is not designed to run inside a Rails or sinatra app, but it can be easily installed as a gem.
How to use it
Requirements
- Ruby 2.6.3 or greater
- Redis
Server setup
Most linux distributions have by default a very low open files limit. In order to sustain more than 1024 ( default ) connections, you need to apply the following changes to your system:
Add to /etc/sysctl.conf
:
fs.file-max = 50000
Add to /etc/security/limits.conf
:
* hard nofile 50000
* soft nofile 50000
* hard nproc 50000
* soft nproc 50000
Cluster load-balancing setup with Haproxy
If you want to run multiple slanger instances in a cluster, one option will be to balance the connections with Haproxy.
A basic config can be found in the folder examples
.
Haproxy can be also used for SSL termination, leaving slanger to not have to deal with SSL checks and so on, making it lighter.
Installation instruction
The OceanEx Slanger depends on ruby 2.6.3 and above, please install ruby 2.6.3 first before install the OceanEx Slanger. It could also run perfectly on the latest 2.7.1. If you want to align with the latest ruby, you might clone the source code and compile yourself.
Linux(Ubuntu)
You could install the right version of ruby via rbenv
sudo apt-get install rbenv
rbenv install 2.6.3
rbenv global 2.6.3
Then install the OceanEx Slanger
gem install oceanex-slanger
Mac
Install the ruby version via home brew
brew install ruby
You might also install via rbenv
brew install rbenv
rbenv install 2.6.3
rbenv global 2.6.3
Installation might fail when some dependent gems builds their native extension. This is due to the c compiler converts the warning to error when do so.
If you see installation fails due to implicit-function-declaration
, you could try the following step to suppress the warning.
gem install oceanex-slanger -- --with-cflags="-Wno-error=implicit-function-declaration"
Start the OceanEx Slanger in local environment
Both the app key and app secret are just random string, you could choose any string. However, it is recommended to be long enough to keep secure.
Oceanex Slanger also depends on redis service, specify the redis url when launching the OceanEx Slanger.
slanger --app_key $APP_KEY --secret $APP_SECRET -r $REDIS_URL
If all went to plan you should see the following output to STDOUT
.d8888b. 888
d88P Y88b 888
Y88b. 888
"Y888b. 888 8888b. 88888b. .d88b. .d88b. 888d888
"Y88b. 888 "88b 888 "88b d88P"88b d8P Y8b 888P"
"888 888 .d888888 888 888 888 888 88888888 888
Y88b d88P 888 888 888 888 888 Y88b 888 Y8b. 888
"Y8888P" 888 "Y888888 888 888 "Y88888 "Y8888 888
888
Y8b d88P
"Y88P"
Slanger API server listening on port 4567
Slanger WebSocket server listening on port 8080
Start the OceanEx Slanger in Docker environment
The OceanEx Slanger supports running in docker environment and such approach is already encapsulated in the make command. The dependent Redis docker image is also automatically downloaded and started.
For the app key and app secret, please check docker-compose.yaml
and modify as needed.
Build the docker image
make build
Start the OceanEx slanger
make up
Stop the service
make down
Modifying your application code to use the OceanEx Slanger service
Once you have a OceanEx Slanger instance listening for incoming connections you need to alter you application code to use the OceanEx Slanger endpoint instead of Pusher. Fortunately this is very simple, unobtrusive, easily reversable, and very painless.
First you will need to add code to your server side component that publishes events to the Pusher HTTP REST API, usually this means telling the Pusher client to use a different host and port, e.g. consider this Ruby example
...
Pusher.host = 'slanger.example.com'
Pusher.port = 4567
You will also need to do the same to the Pusher JavaScript client in your client side JavaScript, e.g
<script type="text/javascript">
var pusher = new Pusher('#{Pusher.key}', {
wsHost: "0.0.0.0",
wsPort: "8080",
wssPort: "8080",
enabledTransports: ['ws', 'flash']
});
</script>
Of course you could proxy all requests to ws.example.com
to port 8080 of your Slanger node and api.example.com
to port 4567 of your Slanger node for example, that way you would only need to set the host property of the Pusher client.
Configuration Options
OceanEx Slanger supports several configuration options, which can be supplied as command line arguments at invocation. You can also supply a yaml file containing config options. If you use the config file in combination with other configuration options, the values passed on the command line will win. Allows running multiple instances with only a few differences easy.
-k or --app_key This is the Pusher app key you want to use. This is a required argument on command line or in optional config file
-s or --secret This is your Pusher secret. This is a required argument on command line or in optional config file
-C or --config_file Path to Yaml file that can contain all or some of the configuration options, including required arguments
-r or --redis_address An address where there is a Redis server running. This is an optional argument and defaults to redis://127.0.0.1:6379/0
-a or --api_host This is the address that Slanger will bind the HTTP REST API part of the service to. This is an optional argument and defaults to 0.0.0.0:4567
-w or --websocket_host This is the address that Slanger will bind the WebSocket part of the service to. This is an optional argument and defaults to 0.0.0.0:8080
-i or --require Require an additional file before starting Slanger to tune it to your needs. This is an optional argument
-p or --private_key_file Private key file for SSL support. This argument is optional, if given, SSL will be enabled
-b or --webhook_url URL for webhooks. This argument is optional, if given webhook callbacks will be made http://pusher.com/docs/webhooks
-c or --cert_file Certificate file for SSL support. This argument is optional, if given, SSL will be enabled
-v or --[no-]verbose This makes Slanger run verbosely, meaning WebSocket frames will be echoed to STDOUT. Useful for debugging
--pid_file The path to a file you want slanger to write it's PID to. Optional.
Original Author
- Stevie Graham
Original Core Team
- Stevie Graham
- Mark Burns
Original Contributors
- Stevie Graham
- Mark Burns
- Florian Gilcher
- Claudio Poli
Current Core Team and Contributor
- Joblee
- Steve
- Meng
- Sniper
- Jiayu
© 2021 a OceanEx joint.