Skip to main content

A Python SignalR Core client(json and messagepack), with invocation auth and two way streaming. Compatible with azure / serverless functions. Also with automatic reconnect and manually reconnect.

Project description

SignalR core client

logo alt

Links

A Tiny How To

Connect to a server without auth

hub_connection = HubConnectionBuilder()\
    .with_url(server_url)\
    .configure_logging(logging.DEBUG)\
    .with_automatic_reconnect({
        "type": "raw",
        "keep_alive_interval": 10,
        "reconnect_interval": 5,
        "max_attempts": 5
    }).build()

Connect to a server with auth

login_function must provide auth token

hub_connection = HubConnectionBuilder()\
            .with_url(server_url,
            options={
                "access_token_factory": login_function,
                "headers": {
                    "mycustomheader": "mycustomheadervalue"
                }
            })\
            .configure_logging(logging.DEBUG)\
            .with_automatic_reconnect({
                "type": "raw",
                "keep_alive_interval": 10,
                "reconnect_interval": 5,
                "max_attempts": 5
            }).build()

Unauthorized errors

A login function must provide an error controller if authorization fails. When connection starts, if authorization fails exception will be propagated.

    def login(self):
        response = requests.post(
            self.login_url,
            json={
                "username": self.email,
                "password": self.password
                },verify=False)
        if response.status_code == 200:
            return response.json()["token"]
        raise requests.exceptions.ConnectionError()

    hub_connection.start()   # this code will raise  requests.exceptions.ConnectionError() if auth fails

Configure logging

HubConnectionBuilder()\
    .with_url(server_url,
    .configure_logging(logging.DEBUG)
    ...

Configure socket trace

HubConnectionBuilder()\
    .with_url(server_url,
    .configure_logging(logging.DEBUG, socket_trace=True) 
    ... 

Configure your own handler

 import logging
handler = logging.StreamHandler()
handler.setLevel(logging.DEBUG)
hub_connection = HubConnectionBuilder()\
    .with_url(server_url, options={"verify_ssl": False}) \
    .configure_logging(logging.DEBUG, socket_trace=True, handler=handler)
    ...

Configuring reconnection

After reaching max_attempts an exeption will be thrown and on_disconnect event will be fired.

hub_connection = HubConnectionBuilder()\
    .with_url(server_url)\
    ...
    .build()

Configuring additional headers

hub_connection = HubConnectionBuilder()\
            .with_url(server_url,
            options={
                "headers": {
                    "mycustomheader": "mycustomheadervalue"
                }
            })
            ...
            .build()

Configuring additional querystring parameters

server_url ="http.... /?myquerystringparam=134&foo=bar"
connection = HubConnectionBuilder()\
            .with_url(server_url,
            options={
            })\
            .build()

Congfiguring skip negotiation

hub_connection = HubConnectionBuilder() \
        .with_url("ws://"+server_url, options={
            "verify_ssl": False,
            "skip_negotiation": False,
            "headers": {
            }
        }) \
        .configure_logging(logging.DEBUG, socket_trace=True, handler=handler) \
        .build()

Configuring ping(keep alive)

keep_alive_interval sets the seconds of ping message

hub_connection = HubConnectionBuilder()\
    .with_url(server_url)\
    .configure_logging(logging.DEBUG)\
    .with_automatic_reconnect({
        "type": "raw",
        "keep_alive_interval": 10,
        "reconnect_interval": 5,
        "max_attempts": 5
    }).build()

Configuring logging

hub_connection = HubConnectionBuilder()\
    .with_url(server_url)\
    .configure_logging(logging.DEBUG)\
    .with_automatic_reconnect({
        "type": "raw",
        "keep_alive_interval": 10,
        "reconnect_interval": 5,
        "max_attempts": 5
    }).build()

Configure messagepack

from signalrcore1.protocol.messagepack_protocol import MessagePackHubProtocol

HubConnectionBuilder()
.with_url(self.server_url, options={"verify_ssl": False})
...
.with_hub_protocol(MessagePackHubProtocol())
...
.build()

Events

On Connect / On Disconnect

on_open - fires when connection is opened and ready to send messages on_close - fires when connection is closed

hub_connection.on_open(lambda: print("connection opened and handshake received ready to send messages"))
hub_connection.on_close(lambda: print("connection closed"))

On Hub Error (Hub Exceptions ...)

hub_connection.on_error(lambda data: print(f"An exception was thrown closed{data.error}"))

Register an operation

ReceiveMessage - signalr method print - function that has as parameters args of signalr method

hub_connection.on("ReceiveMessage", print)

Sending messages

SendMessage - signalr method username, message - parameters of signalrmethod

    hub_connection.send("SendMessage", [username, message])

Sending messages with callback

SendMessage - signalr method username, message - parameters of signalrmethod

    send_callback_received = threading.Lock()
    send_callback_received.acquire()
    self.connection.send(
        "SendMessage", # Method
        [self.username, self.message], # Params
        lambda m: send_callback_received.release()) # Callback
    if not send_callback_received.acquire(timeout=1):
        raise ValueError("CALLBACK NOT RECEIVED")

Requesting streaming (Server to client)

hub_connection.stream(
            "Counter",
            [len(self.items), 500]).subscribe({
                "next": self.on_next,
                "complete": self.on_complete,
                "error": self.on_error
            })

Client side Streaming

from signalrcore1.subject import Subject

subject = Subject()

# Start Streaming
hub_connection.send("UploadStream", subject)

# Each iteration
subject.next(str(iteration))

# End streaming
subject.complete()

Full Examples

Examples will be avaiable here It were developed using package from aspnet core - SignalRChat

Chat example

A mini example could be something like this:

import logging
import sys
from signalrcore1.hub_connection_builder import HubConnectionBuilder


def input_with_default(input_text, default_value):
    value = input(input_text.format(default_value))
    return default_value if value is None or value.strip() == "" else value


server_url = input_with_default('Enter your server url(default: {0}): ', "wss://localhost:44376/chatHub")
username = input_with_default('Enter your username (default: {0}): ', "mandrewcito")
handler = logging.StreamHandler()
handler.setLevel(logging.DEBUG)
hub_connection = HubConnectionBuilder()
.with_url(server_url, options={"verify_ssl": False})
.configure_logging(logging.DEBUG, socket_trace=True, handler=handler)
.with_automatic_reconnect({
    "type": "interval",
    "keep_alive_interval": 10,
    "intervals": [1, 3, 5, 6, 7, 87, 3]
}).build()

hub_connection.on_open(lambda: print("connection opened and handshake received ready to send messages"))
hub_connection.on_close(lambda: print("connection closed"))

hub_connection.on("ReceiveMessage", print)
hub_connection.start()
message = None

# Do login

while message != "exit()":
    message = input(">> ")
    if message is not None and message != "" and message != "exit()":
        hub_connection.send("SendMessage", [username, message])

hub_connection.stop()

sys.exit(0)

Project details


Download files

Download the file for your platform. If you're not sure which to choose, learn more about installing packages.

Source Distribution

signalrcore1-1.1.6.tar.gz (24.1 kB view details)

Uploaded Source

Built Distribution

If you're not sure about the file name format, learn more about wheel file names.

signalrcore1-1.1.6-py3-none-any.whl (35.0 kB view details)

Uploaded Python 3

File details

Details for the file signalrcore1-1.1.6.tar.gz.

File metadata

  • Download URL: signalrcore1-1.1.6.tar.gz
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 24.1 kB
  • Tags: Source
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? No
  • Uploaded via: twine/6.1.0 CPython/3.13.7

File hashes

Hashes for signalrcore1-1.1.6.tar.gz
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 95aa8214e1a80771d8f71fde7bb201e099169ee94a6410b76eea338526bb2e6c
MD5 01d51cac981a9a7d14cc18950044b7af
BLAKE2b-256 04cab5c020387e0b9094bedca8ef3d82182b49420bfd245427063b43bf6e8602

See more details on using hashes here.

File details

Details for the file signalrcore1-1.1.6-py3-none-any.whl.

File metadata

  • Download URL: signalrcore1-1.1.6-py3-none-any.whl
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 35.0 kB
  • Tags: Python 3
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? No
  • Uploaded via: twine/6.1.0 CPython/3.13.7

File hashes

Hashes for signalrcore1-1.1.6-py3-none-any.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 d293fe992592db9851cc57e93da5380221e4f9c1f5fd6ed5ec56ff8cbb2f0594
MD5 29845973e686aa9a9975e4028ed92d69
BLAKE2b-256 65ff07f5587b8769854673fed664dfe7d9c24613ba76597eb405b0e90b6d4a48

See more details on using hashes here.

Supported by

AWS Cloud computing and Security Sponsor Datadog Monitoring Depot Continuous Integration Fastly CDN Google Download Analytics Pingdom Monitoring Sentry Error logging StatusPage Status page