django-channels-jsonrpc

A JSON-RPC implementation for Django channels consumer.


License
MIT
Install
pip install django-channels-jsonrpc==1.2.0

Documentation

Django-channels-jsonrpc


For channels 2, see here


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The Django-channels-jsonrpc is aimed to enable JSON-RPC functionnality on top of the excellent django channels project and especially their Websockets functionality. It is aimed to be:

  • Fully integrated with Channels
  • Fully implement JSON-RPC 1 and 2 protocol
  • Support both WebSocket and HTTP transports
  • Easy integration

Tech

The only Django-channels-jsonrpc dependency is the Django channels project

Installation

Download and extract the latest pre-built release.

Install the dependencies and devDependencies and start the server.

$ pip install django-channels-jsonrpc

Use

See complete example here, and in particular consumer.py

It is intended to be used as a Websocket consumer. See documentation except... simplier...

Import JsonRpcConsumer class and create the consumer

from channels_jsonrpc import JsonRpcConsumer

class MyJsonRpcConsumer(JsonRpcConsumer):

    def connect(self, message, **kwargs):
        """
        Perform things on WebSocket connection start
        """
        self.message.reply_channel.send({"accept": True})

        print("connect")
        # Do stuff if needed

    def disconnect(self, message, **kwargs):
        """
        Perform things on WebSocket connection close
        """
        print("disconnect")
        # Do stuff if needed

JsonRpcConsumer derives from Channels WebSocketConsumer, you can read about all it's features here: https://channels.readthedocs.io/en/stable/generics.html#websockets

Then the last step is to create the RPC methos hooks. IT is done with the decorator:

@MyJsonRpcConsumer.rpc_method()

Like this:

@MyJsonRpcConsumer.rpc_method()
def ping():
    return "pong"

MyJsonRpcConsumer.rpc_method() accept a string as a parameter to 'rename' the function

@MyJsonRpcConsumer.rpc_method("mymodule.rpc.ping")
def ping():
    return "pong"

Will now be callable with "method":"mymodule.rpc.ping" in the rpc call:

{"id":1, "jsonrpc":"2.0","method":"mymodule.rpc.ping","params":{}}

RPC methods can obviously accept parameters. They also return "results" or "errors":

@MyJsonRpcConsumer.rpc_method("mymodule.rpc.ping")
def ping(fake_an_error):
    if fake_an_error:
        # Will return an error to the client
        #  --> {"id":1, "jsonrpc":"2.0","method":"mymodule.rpc.ping","params":{}}
        #  <-- {"id": 1, "jsonrpc": "2.0", "error": {"message": "fake_error", "code": -32000, "data": ["fake_error"]}}
        raise Exception("fake_error")
    else:
        # Will return a result to the client
        #  --> {"id":1, "jsonrpc":"2.0","method":"mymodule.rpc.ping","params":{}}
        #  <-- {"id": 1, "jsonrpc": "2.0", "result": "pong"}
        return "pong"

Sessions and other parameters from Message object

The original channel message - that can contain sessions (if activated with http_user) and other important info can be easily accessed by retrieving the **kwargs and get a parameter named original_message

MyJsonRpcConsumerTest.rpc_method()
def json_rpc_method(param1, **kwargs):
    original_message = kwargs["orginal_message"]
    ##do something with original_message

Example:

class MyJsonRpcConsumerTest(JsonRpcConsumer):
    # Set to True to automatically port users from HTTP cookies
    # (you don't need channel_session_user, this implies it)
    # https://channels.readthedocs.io/en/stable/generics.html#websockets
    http_user = True

....

@MyJsonRpcConsumerTest.rpc_method()
    def ping(**kwargs):
        original_message = kwargs["orginal_message"]
        original_message.channel_session["test"] = True
        return "pong"

Notifications

Inbound notifications

Those are the one sent from the client to the server. They are dealt with the same way RPC methods are, except that instead of using rpc_method(), you can use rpc_notification() Thos rpc_notifications can also retrieve the original_message object

# Will be triggered when receiving this
#  --> {"jsonrpc":"2.0","method":"notification.alt_name","params":["val_param1", "val_param2"]}
@MyJsonRpcWebsocketConsumerTest.rpc_notification("notification.alt_name")
def notification1(param1, param2, **kwargs):
    original_message = kwargs["orginal_message"]
    # Do something with notification
    # ...
    # Notification shouldn't return anything.
    return

Outbound notifications

The server might want to send notifications to one or more of its clients. For that JsonRpcWebsocketConsumer provides 2 static methods:

  • JsonRpcWebsocketConsumer.notify_group(group_name, method, params)

Using channels'groups you can notify a whole group using this method

@MyJsonRpcWebsocketConsumerTest.rpc_method()
def send_to_group(group_name):
    MyJsonRpcWebsocketConsumerTest.notify_group(group_name, "notification.notif", {"payload": 1234})
    return True

Calling the RPC-method will send this notification to all the group group_name

  • JsonRpcWebsocketConsumer.notify_channel(reply_channel, method, params)

This will notify only one channel/client.

@MyJsonRpcWebsocketConsumerTest.rpc_method()
def send_to_reply_channel(**kwargs):
    original_message = kwarg["original_message"]
    MyJsonRpcWebsocketConsumerTest.notify_channel(original_message.reply_channel,
                                                "notification.ownnotif",
                                                {"payload": 12})
    return True

The reply_channel can be found in theoriginal_message object.

Transport-specific rpc-method/notifications

If you want to restrict rpc methods or notifications access to a specific transport method (http or websocket) The two decorator rpc_method() and rpc_notification() accept parameters to restric their use. websocket (default: True) and http (default: True)

You can use them like this:

@MyJsonRpcWebsocketConsumerTest.rpc_notification("notification.alt_name", websocket=True, http=False)
def notification1(param1, param2, **kwargs):
    original_message = kwargs["orginal_message"]
    # This notification will only be used when using websocket transport
    return

Custom JSON encoder class

from django.core.serializers.json import DjangoJSONEncoder


class DjangoJsonRpcConsumer(JsonRpcConsumer):
    json_encoder_class = DjangoJSONEncoder

Testing

The JsonRpcConsumer class can be tested the same way Channels Consumers are tested. See here

You just need to remember to set your JsonRpcConsumer class to TEST_MODE in the test:

from channels.tests import ChannelTestCase, HttpClient
from .consumer import MyJsonRpcConsumer

MyJsonRpcConsumer.TEST_MODE = True



class TestsJsonConsumer(ChannelTestCase):
    def assertResult(self, method, params, result, error=False):
        client = HttpClient()
        client.send_and_consume('websocket.receive', text=request(method, params))
        key = "result" if not error else "error"
        message = client.receive()
        if message is None or key not in message:
            raise KeyError("'%s' key not in message: %s" % (key, message))

        self.assertEquals(message[key], result)

    def assertError(self, method, params, result):
        self.assertResult(method, params, result, True)

    def test_assert_result(self):

         self.assertResult("ping", {}, "pong")

License

MIT

Have fun with Websockets!

Free Software, Hell Yeah!