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Gotalk exists to make it easy for programs to talk with one another over the internet, like a web app coordinating with a web server, or a bunch of programs dividing work amongst each other.

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Gotalk...

Go API Documentation on godoc.org →

Usage

Gotalk is a simple go module - import it into your program and go build:

import "github.com/rsms/gotalk"

To use a specific version, run go get github.com/rsms/gotalk@v1.0.1 (substituting the version number for the version you desire.)

Examples can be found in the examples directory. Build them with go build:

$ cd examples/websocket-chat
$ go build
$ ./websocket-chat
Listening on http://localhost:1235/

Here's a minimal but complete example program: (examples/websocket-minimal)

package main
import (
  "net/http"
  "github.com/rsms/gotalk"
)
func main() {
  gotalk.Handle("echo", func(in string) (string, error) {
    return in, nil
  })
  http.Handle("/gotalk/", gotalk.WebSocketHandler())
  http.Handle("/", http.FileServer(http.Dir(".")))
  print("Listening on http://localhost:1234/\n")
  panic(http.ListenAndServe("localhost:1234", nil))
}

Developing Gotalk & contributing

See CONTRIBUTING.md

Other implementations

Introduction

A terribly boring amateur comic strip

Gotalk takes the natural approach of bidirectional and concurrent communication — any peer have the ability to expose "operations" as well as asking other peers to perform operations. The traditional restrictions of who can request and who can respond usually associated with a client-server model is nowhere to be found in Gotalk.

Gotalk in a nutshell

Bidirectional — There's no discrimination on capabilities depending on who connected or who accepted. Both "servers" and "clients" can expose operations as well as send requests to the other side.

Concurrent — Requests, results, and notifications all share a single connection without blocking each other by means of pipelining. There's no serialization on request-result or even for a single large message, as the Gotalk protocol is frame-based and multiplexes messages over a single connection. This means you can perform several requests at once without having to think about queueing or blocking.

Diagram of how Gotalk uses connection pipelining

Simple — Gotalk has a simple and opinionated API with very few components. You expose an operation via "handle" and send requests via "request".

Debuggable — The Gotalk protocol's wire format is ASCII-based for easy on-the-wire inspection of data. For example, here's a protocol message representing an operation request: r0001005hello00000005world. The Gotalk protocol can thus be operated over any reliable byte transport.

Practical — Gotalk includes a JavaScript implementation for Web Sockets alongside the full-featured Go implementation, making it easy to build real-time web applications. The Gotalk source code also includes a number of easily-readable examples.

By example

There are a few examples in the examples directory demonstrating Gotalk. But let's explore a simple program right now — here's a little something written in Go which demonstrates the use of an operation named "greet":

func server() {
  gotalk.Handle("greet", func(in GreetIn) (GreetOut, error) {
    return GreetOut{"Hello " + in.Name}, nil
  })
  if err := gotalk.Serve("tcp", "localhost:1234"); err != nil {
    log.Fatalln(err)
  }
}

func client() {
  s, err := gotalk.Connect("tcp", "localhost:1234")
  if err != nil {
    log.Fatalln(err)
  }
  greeting := &GreetOut{}
  if err := s.Request("greet", GreetIn{"Rasmus"}, greeting); err != nil {
    log.Fatalln(err)
  }
  log.Printf("greeting: %+v\n", greeting)
  s.Close()
}

Let's look at the above example in more detail, broken apart to see what's going on.

We begin by importing the gotalk library together with log which we use for printing to the console:

package main
import (
  "log"
  "github.com/rsms/gotalk"
)

We define two types: Expected input (request parameters) and output (result) for our "greet" operation:

type GreetIn struct {
  Name string `json:"name"`
}
type GreetOut struct {
  Greeting string `json:"greeting"`
}

Registers a process-global request handler for an operation called "greet" accepting parameters of type GreetIn, returning results of type GreetOut:

func server() {
  gotalk.Handle("greet", func(in GreetIn) (GreetOut, error) {
    return GreetOut{"Hello " + in.Name}, nil
  })

Finally at the bottom of our server function we call gotalk.Serve, which starts a local TCP server on port 1234:

  if err := gotalk.Serve("tcp", "localhost:1234"); err != nil {
    log.Fatalln(err)
  }
}

In out client function we start by connecting to the server:

func client() {
  s, err := gotalk.Connect("tcp", "localhost:1234")
  if err != nil {
    log.Fatalln(err)
  }

Finally we send a request for "greet" and print the result:

  greeting := GreetOut{}
  if err := s.Request("greet", GreetIn{"Rasmus"}, &greeting); err != nil {
    log.Fatalln(err)
  }
  log.Printf("greeting: %+v\n", greeting)

  s.Close()
}

Output:

greeting: {Greeting:Hello Rasmus}

Gotalk in the web browser

Gotalk is implemented not only in the full-fledged Go package, but also in a JavaScript library. This allows writing web apps talking Gotalk via Web Sockets possible.

// server.go:
package main
import (
  "net/http"
  "github.com/rsms/gotalk"
)
func main() {
  gotalk.Handle("echo", func(in string) (string, error) {
    return in, nil
  })
  http.Handle("/gotalk/", gotalk.WebSocketHandler())
  http.Handle("/", http.FileServer(http.Dir(".")))
  err := http.ListenAndServe("localhost:1234", nil)
  if err != nil {
    panic(err)
  }
}

In our html document, we begin by registering any operations we can handle:

<!-- index.html -->
<body>
<script type="text/javascript" src="/gotalk/gotalk.js"></script>
<script>
gotalk.handle('greet', function (params, result) {
  result({ greeting: 'Hello ' + params.name });
});
</script>

Notice how we load a JavaScript from "/gotalk/gotalk.js" — a gotalk web socket server embeds a matching web browser JS library which it returns from {path where gotalk web socket is mounted}/gotalk.js. It uses Etag cache validation, so you shouldn't need to think about "cache busting" the URL.

We can't "listen & accept" connections in a web browser, but we can "connect" so we do just that:

<!-- index.html -->
<body>
<script type="text/javascript" src="/gotalk/gotalk.js"></script>
<script>
gotalk.handle('greet', function (params, result) {
  result({ greeting: 'Hello ' + params.name });
});

var s = gotalk.connection().on('open', function () {
  // do something useful
}).on('close', function (err) {
  if (err.isGotalkProtocolError) return console.error(err);
});
</script>

This is enough for enabling the server to do things in the browser ...

But you probably want to have the browser send requests to the server, so let's send a "echo" request just as our connection opens:

var s = gotalk.connection().on('open', function () {
  s.request("echo", "Hello world", function (err, result) {
    if (err) return console.error('echo failed:', err);
    console.log('echo result:', result);
  });
});

We could rewrite our code like this to allow some UI component to send a request:

var s = gotalk.connection();

button.addEventListener('click', function () {
  s.request("echo", "Hello world", function (err, result) {
    if (err) return console.error('echo failed:', err);
    console.log('echo result:', result);
  });
});

The request will fail with an error "socket is closed" if the user clicks our button while the connection isn't open.

There are two ways to open a connection on a socket: Sock.prototype.open which simply opens a connection, and Sock.prototype.openKeepAlive which keeps the connection open, reconnecting as needed with exponential back-off and internet reachability knowledge. gotalk.connection() is a short-hand for creating a new Sock with gotalk.defaultHandlers and then calling openKeepAlive on it.

Protocol and wire format

The wire format is designed to be human-readable and flexible; it's byte-based and can be efficiently implemented in a number of environments ranging from HTTP and WebSocket in a web browser to raw TCP in Go or C. The protocol provides only a small set of operations on which more elaborate operations can be modeled by the user.

This document describes protocol version 1

Here's a complete description of the protocol:

conversation    = ProtocolVersion Message*
message         = SingleRequest | StreamRequest
                | SingleResult | StreamResult
                | ErrorResult | RetryResult
                | Notification | ProtocolError

ProtocolVersion = <hexdigit> <hexdigit>

SingleRequest   = "r" requestID operation payload
StreamRequest   = "s" requestID operation payload StreamReqPart*
StreamReqPart   = "p" requestID payload
SingleResult    = "R" requestID payload
StreamResult    = "S" requestID payload StreamResult*
ErrorResult     = "E" requestID payload
RetryResult     = "e" requestID wait payload
Notification    = "n" name payload
Heartbeat       = "h" load time
ProtocolError   = "f" code

requestID       = <byte> <byte> <byte> <byte>

operation       = text3
name            = text3
wait            = hexUInt8
code            = hexUInt8
time            = hexUInt8
load            = hexUInt4

text3           = text3Size text3Value
text3Size       = hexUInt3
text3Value      = <<byte>{text3Size} as utf8 text>

payload         = payloadSize payloadData
payloadSize     = hexUInt8
payloadData     = <byte>{payloadSize}

hexUInt3        = <hexdigit> <hexdigit> <hexdigit>
hexUInt4        = <hexdigit> <hexdigit> <hexdigit> <hexdigit>
hexUInt8        = <hexdigit> <hexdigit> <hexdigit> <hexdigit>
                  <hexdigit> <hexdigit> <hexdigit> <hexdigit>

Handshake

A conversation begins with the protocol version:

01  -- ProtocolVersion 1

If the version of the protocol spoken by the other end is not supported by the reader, a ProtocolError message is sent with code 1 and the connection is terminated. Otherwise, any messages are read and/or written.

Single-payload requests and results

This is a "single-payload" request ...

+------------------ SingleRequest
|   +---------------- requestID   "0001"
|   |      +--------- operation   "echo" (text3Size 4, text3Value "echo")
|   |      |       +- payloadSize 25
|   |      |       |
r0001004echo00000019{"message":"Hello World"}

... and a corresponding "single-payload" result:

+------------------ SingleResult
|   +---------------- requestID   "0001"
|   |       +-------- payloadSize 25
|   |       |
R000100000019{"message":"Hello World"}

Each request is identified by exactly three bytes—the requestID—which is requestor-specific and has no purpose beyond identity, meaning the value is never interpreted. 4 bytes can express 4 294 967 296 different values, meaning we can send up to 4 294 967 295 requests while another request is still being served. Should be enough.

These "single" requests & results are the most common protocol messages, and as their names indicates, their payloads follow immediately after the header. For large payloads this can become an issue when dealing with many concurrent requests over a single connection, for which there's a more complicated "streaming" request & result type which we will explore later on.

Faults

There are two types of replies indicating a fault: ErrorResult for requestor faults and RetryResult for responder faults.

If a request is faulty, like missing some required input data or sent over an unauthorized connection, an "error" is send as the reply instead of a regular result:

+------------------ ErrorResult
|   +---------------- requestID   "0001"
|   |       +-------- payloadSize 38
|   |       |
E000100000026{"error":"Unknown operation \"echo\""}

A request that produces an error should not be retried as-is, similar to the 400-class of errors of the HTTP protocol.

In the scenario a fault occurs on the responder side, like suffering a temporary internal error or is unable to complete the request because of resource starvation, a RetryResult is sent as the reply to a request:

+-------------------- RetryResult
|   +------------------ requestID   "0001"
|   |       +---------- wait        0
|   |       |       +-- payloadSize 20
|   |       |       |
e00010000000000000014"service restarting"

In this case — where wait is zero — the requestor is free to retry the request at its convenience.

However in some scenarios the responder might require the requestor to wait for some time before retrying the request, in which case the wait property has a non-zero value:

+-------------------- RetryResult
|   +------------------ requestID   "0001"
|   |       +---------- wait        5000 ms
|   |       |       +-- payloadSize 20
|   |       |       |
e00010000138800000014"request rate limit"

In this case the requestor must not retry the request until at least 5000 milliseconds has passed.

If the protocol communication itself experiences issues—e.g. an illegal message is received—a ProtocolError is written and the connection is closed.

ProtocolError codes:

CodeMeaningComments
0AbnormalClosed because of an abnormal condition (e.g. server fault, etc)
1Unsupported protocolThe other side does not support the callers protocol
2Invalid messageAn invalid message was transmitted
3TimeoutThe other side closed the connection because communicating took too long

Example of a peer which does not support the version of the protocol spoken by the sender:

+-------- ProtocolError
|       +-- code 1
|       |
f00000001

Streaming requests and results

For more complicated scenarios there are "streaming-payload" requests and results at our disposal. This allows transmitting of large amounts of data without the need for large buffers. For example this could be used to forward audio data to audio playback hardware, or to transmit a large file off of slow media like a tape drive or hard-disk drive.

Because transmitting a streaming request or result does not occupy "the line" (single-payloads are transmitted serially), they can also be useful when there are many concurrent requests happening over a single connection.

Here's an example of a "streaming-payload" request ...

+------------------ StreamRequest
|   +---------------- requestID   "0001"
|   |      +--------- operation   "echo" (text3Size 4, text3Value "echo")
|   |      |       +- payloadSize 11
|   |      |       |
s0001004echo0000000b{"message":

+------------------ streamReqPart
|   +---------------- requestID   "0001"
|   |       +-------- payloadSize 14
|   |       |
p00010000000e"Hello World"}

+------------------ streamReqPart
|   +---------------- requestID   "0001"
|   |       +-------- payloadSize 0 (end of stream)
|   |       |
p000100000000

... followed by a "streaming-payload" result:

+------------------ StreamResult (1st part)
|   +---------------- requestID   "0001"
|   |       +-------- payloadSize 11
|   |       |
S00010000000b{"message":

+------------------ StreamResult (2nd part)
|   +---------------- requestID   "0001"
|   |       +-------- payloadSize 14
|   |       |
S00010000000e"Hello World"}

+------------------ StreamResult
|   +---------------- requestID   "0001"
|   |       +-------- payloadSize 0 (end of stream)
|   |       |
S000100000000

Streaming requests occupy resources on the responder's side for the duration of the "stream session". Therefore handling of streaming requests should be limited and "RetryResult" used to throttle requests:

+-------------------- RetryResult
|   +------------------ requestID   "0001"
|   |       +---------- wait        5000 ms
|   |       |       +-- payloadSize 19
|   |       |       |
e00010000138800000013"stream rate limit"

This means that the requestor must not send any new requests until wait time has passed.

Notifications

When there's no expectation on a response, Gotalk provides a "notification" message type:

+---------------------- Notification
|              +--------- name        "chat message" (text3Size 12, text3Value "chat message")
|              |       +- payloadSize 46
|              |       |
n00cchat message0000002e{"message":"Hi","from":"nthn","room":"gonuts"}

Notifications are never replied to nor can they cause "error" results. Applications needing acknowledgement of notification delivery might consider using a request instead.

Heartbeats

Because most responders will limit the time it waits for reads, a heartbeat message is send at a certain interval. When a heartbeat is sent is up to the implementation.

A heartbeat contains the sender's local time in the form of an unsigned 32-bit UNIX timestamp. This is enought to cover usage until 2106. I really hope gotalk is nowhere to be found in 2106.

It also contains an optional "load" value, indicating how pressured, or under what load, the sender is. 0 means "idle" and 65535 (0xffff) means "omg I think I'm dying." This can be used to distribute work to less loaded responders in a load-balancing setup.

+------------------ Heartbeat
|   +--------- load 2
|   |       +- time 2015-02-08 22:09:30 UTC
|   |       |
h000254d7de9a

Notes

Requests and results does not need to match on the "single" vs "streaming" detail — it's perfectly fine to send a streaming request and read a single response, or send a single response just to receive a streaming result. The payload type is orthogonal to the message type, with the exception of an error response which is always a "single-payload" message, carrying any information about the error in its payload. Note however that the current version of the Go package does not provide a high-level API for mixed-kind request-response handling.

For transports which might need "heartbeats" to stay alive, like some raw TCP connections over the internet, the suggested way to implement this is by notifications, e.g. send a "heartbeat" notification at a certain interval while no requests are being sent. The Gotalk protocol does not include a "heartbeat" feature because of this reason, as well as the fact that some transports (like web socket) already provide "heartbeat" features.