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README.md
Azure Web PubSub service client library for Python
Azure Web PubSub Service is an Azure-managed service that helps developers easily build web applications with real-time features and publish-subscribe pattern. Any scenario that requires real-time publish-subscribe messaging between server and clients or among clients can use Azure Web PubSub service. Traditional real-time features that often require polling from server or submitting HTTP requests can also use Azure Web PubSub service.
You can use this library in your app server side to manage the WebSocket client connections, as shown in below diagram:
Use this library to:
- Send messages to hubs and groups.
- Send messages to particular users and connections.
- Organize users and connections into groups.
- Close connections
- Grant, revoke, and check permissions for an existing connection
Source code | Package (Pypi) | Package (Conda) | API reference documentation | Product documentation
Disclaimer
Azure SDK Python packages support for Python 2.7 has ended 01 January 2022. For more information and questions, please refer to https://github.com/Azure/azure-sdk-for-python/issues/20691
Getting started
Prerequisites
- Python 3.6 or later is required to use this package.
- You need an Azure subscription, and a Azure WebPubSub service instance to use this package.
- An existing Azure Web PubSub service instance.
1. Install the package
python -m pip install azure-messaging-webpubsubservice
2. Create and authenticate a WebPubSubServiceClient
You can authenticate the WebPubSubServiceClient
using connection string:
>>> from azure.messaging.webpubsubservice import WebPubSubServiceClient
>>> service = WebPubSubServiceClient.from_connection_string(connection_string='<connection_string>', hub='hub')
Or using the service endpoint and the access key:
>>> from azure.messaging.webpubsubservice import WebPubSubServiceClient
>>> from azure.core.credentials import AzureKeyCredential
>>> service = WebPubSubServiceClient(endpoint='<endpoint>', hub='hub', credential=AzureKeyCredential("<access_key>"))
Or using Azure Active Directory:
-
pip install
azure-identity
-
Follow the document to enable AAD authentication on your Webpubsub resource
-
Update code to use DefaultAzureCredential
>>> from azure.messaging.webpubsubservice import WebPubSubServiceClient >>> from azure.identity import DefaultAzureCredential >>> service = WebPubSubServiceClient(endpoint='<endpoint>', hub='hub', credential=DefaultAzureCredential())
Key concepts
Connection
A connection, also known as a client or a client connection, represents an individual WebSocket connection connected to the Web PubSub service. When successfully connected, a unique connection ID is assigned to this connection by the Web PubSub service.
Hub
A hub is a logical concept for a set of client connections. Usually you use one hub for one purpose, for example, a chat hub, or a notification hub. When a client connection is created, it connects to a hub, and during its lifetime, it belongs to that hub. Different applications can share one Azure Web PubSub service by using different hub names.
Group
A group is a subset of connections to the hub. You can add a client connection to a group, or remove the client connection from the group, anytime you want. For example, when a client joins a chat room, or when a client leaves the chat room, this chat room can be considered to be a group. A client can join multiple groups, and a group can contain multiple clients.
User
Connections to Web PubSub can belong to one user. A user might have multiple connections, for example when a single user is connected across multiple devices or multiple browser tabs.
Message
When the client is connected, it can send messages to the upstream application, or receive messages from the upstream application, through the WebSocket connection.
Examples
Broadcast messages in JSON format
>>> from azure.messaging.webpubsubservice import WebPubSubServiceClient
>>> service = WebPubSubServiceClient.from_connection_string('<connection_string>', hub='hub1')
>>> service.send_to_all(message = {
'from': 'user1',
'data': 'Hello world'
})
The WebSocket client will receive JSON serialized text: {"from": "user1", "data": "Hello world"}
.
Broadcast messages in plain-text format
>>> from azure.messaging.webpubsubservice import WebPubSubServiceClient
>>> service = WebPubSubServiceClient.from_connection_string('<connection_string>', hub='hub1')
>>> service.send_to_all(message = 'Hello world', content_type='text/plain')
The WebSocket client will receive text: Hello world
.
Broadcast messages in binary format
>>> import io
>>> from azure.messaging.webpubsubservice import WebPubSubServiceClient
>>> service = WebPubSubServiceClient.from_connection_string('<connection_string>', hub='hub')
>>> service.send_to_all(message=io.StringIO('Hello World'), content_type='application/octet-stream')
The WebSocket client will receive binary text: b'Hello world'
.
Troubleshooting
Logging
This SDK uses Python standard logging library. You can configure logging print out debugging information to the stdout or anywhere you want.
import sys
import logging
from azure.identity import DefaultAzureCredential
>>> from azure.messaging.webpubsubservice import WebPubSubServiceClient
# Create a logger for the 'azure' SDK
logger = logging.getLogger('azure')
logger.setLevel(logging.DEBUG)
# Configure a console output
handler = logging.StreamHandler(stream=sys.stdout)
logger.addHandler(handler)
endpoint = "<endpoint>"
credential = DefaultAzureCredential()
# This WebPubSubServiceClient will log detailed information about its HTTP sessions, at DEBUG level
service = WebPubSubServiceClient(endpoint=endpoint, hub='hub', credential=credential, logging_enable=True)
Similarly, logging_enable
can enable detailed logging for a single call,
even when it isn't enabled for the WebPubSubServiceClient:
result = service.send_to_all(..., logging_enable=True)
Http request and response details are printed to stdout with this logging config.
Next steps
Check more samples here.
Contributing
This project welcomes contributions and suggestions. Most contributions require you to agree to a Contributor License Agreement (CLA) declaring that you have the right to, and actually do, grant us the rights to use your contribution. For details, visit https://cla.microsoft.com.
When you submit a pull request, a CLA-bot will automatically determine whether you need to provide a CLA and decorate the PR appropriately (e.g., label, comment). Simply follow the instructions provided by the bot. You will only need to do this once across all repos using our CLA.
This project has adopted the Microsoft Open Source Code of Conduct. For more information, see the Code of Conduct FAQ or contact opencode@microsoft.com with any additional questions or comments.