websocket | Rust Web RCON Protocol implementation in Go | Websocket library
kandi X-RAY | websocket Summary
kandi X-RAY | websocket Summary
Rust Web RCON Protocol implementation in Go.
Support
Quality
Security
License
Reuse
Top functions reviewed by kandi - BETA
Currently covering the most popular Java, JavaScript and Python libraries. See a Sample of websocket
websocket Key Features
websocket Examples and Code Snippets
Community Discussions
Trending Discussions on websocket
QUESTION
In my flutter app, I use flutter_bloc for state management.
The bloc
in question uses a repository
. The repository
subscribes to a websocket, and new data is added to a stream.
Problem: My bloc listens to the stream:
...ANSWER
Answered 2021-Dec-06 at 10:53You should use emit
in eventHandler
, use below code to complete your task:
QUESTION
I'm trying to install eth-brownie using 'pipx install eth-brownie' but I get an error saying
...ANSWER
Answered 2022-Jan-02 at 09:59I used pip install eth-brownie and it worked fine, I didnt need to downgrade. Im new to this maybe I could be wrong but it worked fine with me.
QUESTION
I've created a new Java project in IntelliJ with Gradle that uses Java 17. When running my app it has the error Cause: error: invalid source release: 17
.
My Settings
I've installed openjdk-17
through IntelliJ
and set it as my Project SDK
.
The Project language level
has been set to 17 - Sealed types, always-strict floating-point semantics
.
In Modules -> Sources
I've set the Language level
to Project default (17 - Sealed types, always strict floating-point semantics)
.
In Modules -> Dependencies
I've set the Module SDK
to Project SDK openjdk-17
.
In Settings -> Build, Execution, Deployment -> Compiler -> Java Compiler
I've set the Project bytecode version
to 17
.
Gradle
...ANSWER
Answered 2021-Oct-24 at 14:23The message typically entails that your JAVA_HOME environment variable points to a different Java version.
Here are the steps to follow:
- Close IntelliJ IDEA
- Open a terminal window and check your JAVA_HOME variable value:
- *nix system:
echo $JAVA_HOME
- Windows system:
echo %JAVA_HOME%
- *nix system:
- The JAVA_HOME path should be pointing to a different path, then set it to the openjdk-17 path:
- *nix system:
export JAVA_HOME=/path/to/openjdk-17
- Windows system:
set JAVA_HOME=path\to\openjdk-17
- *nix system:
- Open your project again in IntelliJ IDEA
- Make sure to set both source and target compatibility versions (not only the
sourceCompatibility
)
You should be able to build your project.
EDIT: Gradle ToolchainYou may need also to instruct Gradle to use a different JVM than the one it uses itself by setting the Java plugin toolchain to your target version:
QUESTION
I'm trying to upgrade our NestJS GraphQL subscriptions server to utilize graphql-ws
rather than the current subscriptions-transport-ws
(as suggested by the NestJS documentation).
I upgraded the NestJS version to
ANSWER
Answered 2021-Sep-16 at 13:35At the time of release of Apollo Server 3, the protocol used in the graphql-ws library is not yet supported by GraphQL Playground or Apollo Explorer.
see here
It's only advisable to use graphql-ws if interacting with subscriptions via playground is not of much use to you and you're okay interacting with subscriptions solely from your own client that has been setup to use graphql-ws.
To setup your client to use graphql-ws with Apollo. see here.
QUESTION
I am implementing a simple chatbot using keras and WebSockets. I now have a model that can make a prediction about the user input and send the according answer.
When I do it through command line it works fine, however when I try to send the answer through my WebSocket, the WebSocket doesn't even start anymore.
Here is my working WebSocket code:
...ANSWER
Answered 2022-Feb-16 at 19:53There is no problem with your websocket route. Could you please share how you are triggering this route? Websocket is a different protocol and I'm suspecting that you are using a HTTP client to test websocket. For example in Postman:
HTTP requests are different than websocket requests. So, you should use appropriate client to test websocket.
QUESTION
I'm having some trouble with my application. We're using Spring Boot 2.4.10 and Spring Security 5.4.8. We use cookies to interact with the app.
We have a frontend application stored in src/main/resources
that, among other things, connects to a websocket endpoint exposed in /api/v1/notification
.
application.properties
file:
ANSWER
Answered 2022-Jan-25 at 09:29I started digging in Spring Security libraries, and noticed the session cookie was being set in HttpSessionRequestCache.saveRequest(...)
method:
QUESTION
Forgive me for the newb question, but I am confused and obviously not understanding the fundamentals or explanations of how to use a Websocket server hosted over HTTPS
. Everything I find online leads me to have more questions than answers.
I have a Websocket server hosted on my HTTPS
website using Java code.
This is my WebsocketServer.java
file:
ANSWER
Answered 2022-Jan-13 at 14:50Keep it easy.
Certs inside your application are complex - they are hard to manage and you will get problems to run your application in a modern cloud environment (start new environments, renew certs, scale your application, ...).
Simple conclusion: Dont implement any certs.
How-to get encrypted connections?As Mike already pointed out in the comments: WebSockets are just upgraded HTTP(S) connections. A normal webserver (nginx, apache) takes care about the certs. It can be done in kubernetes (as ingress-controller) or with a "bare-metal" webserver.
Both of them should act as a reverse-proxy. This means: Your java-application doesn't know anything about certs. It has just unencrypted connections - like in your code on port 6868
.
But the client will not use this port. 6868
is only internally reachable.
The client will call your reverse-proxy at the normal HTTPS port (=443). The reverse-proxy will forward the connection to your java-application.
Here some links for further information:
QUESTION
After upgrading the jenkins plugin Kubernetes Client to version 1.30.3 (also for 1.31.1) I get the following exceptions in the logs of jenkins when I start a build:
...ANSWER
Answered 2022-Jan-05 at 11:55Downgrade the plugin to kubernetes-client-api:5.10.1-171.vaa0774fb8c20. The latest one has the compatibility issue as of now.
new info: The issue is now solved with upgrading the Kubernetes plugin to version: 1.31.2 https://issues.jenkins.io/browse/JENKINS-67483
QUESTION
I just downloaded activiti-app from github.com/Activiti/Activiti/releases/download/activiti-6.0.0/…
and deployed in tomcat9, but I have this errors when init the app:
ANSWER
Answered 2021-Dec-16 at 09:41Your title says you are using Java 9. With Activiti 6 you will have to use JDK 1.8 (Java 8).
QUESTION
I receive these huge Strings via WebSocket:
...ANSWER
Answered 2021-Nov-26 at 02:11You can run the code snippet below to see it in operation. I have also attached a screenshot of a console showing the output of values.
Community Discussions, Code Snippets contain sources that include Stack Exchange Network
Vulnerabilities
No vulnerabilities reported
Install websocket
Support
Reuse Trending Solutions
Find, review, and download reusable Libraries, Code Snippets, Cloud APIs from over 650 million Knowledge Items
Find more librariesStay Updated
Subscribe to our newsletter for trending solutions and developer bootcamps
Share this Page