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Simple server/client channel implemented over websockets with support for Bevy.

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Bevy Simplenet

Provides a bi-directional server/client channel implemented over websockets. This crate is suitable for user authentication, talking to a matchmaking service, communicating between micro-services, games that don't have strict latency requirements, etc.

  • Client/server channel includes one-shot messages and a request/response API.
  • Client message statuses can be tracked.
  • Clients automatically work on native and WASM targets.
  • Clients can be authenticated by the server.
  • Provides optional server TLS.

Check out the example for a demonstration of how to build a Bevy client using this crate.

Check out bevy_simplenet_events for an event-based framework for networking that builds on this crate.

Features

  • default: includes bevy, client, server features
  • bevy: derives Resource on Client and Server
  • client: enables clients (native and WASM targets)
  • server: enables servers (native-only targets)
  • tls-rustls: enables TLS for servers via rustls
  • tls-openssl: enables TLS for servers via OpenSSL

WASM

On WASM targets the client backend will not update while any other tasks are running. You must either build an IO-oriented application that naturally spends a lot of time polling tasks, or manually release the main thread periodically (e.g. with web_sys::Window::set_timeout_with_callback_and_timeout_and_arguments_0()). For Bevy apps the latter happens automatically at the end of every app update/tick (see the bevy::app::ScheduleRunnerPlugin implementation).

Usage notes

  • Servers and clients must be created with enfync runtimes. The backend is ezsockets.
  • A client's AuthRequest type must match the corresponding server's Authenticator type.
  • Client ids are defined by clients via their AuthRequest when connecting to a server. Connections will be rejected if an id is already connected.
  • Client connect messages will be cloned for all reconnect attempts, so they should be treated as static data.
  • Server or client messages may fail to send if the underlying connection is broken. Clients can use the signals returned from Client::send() and Client::request() to track the status of a message. Client request results will always be emitted by Client::next(). Message tracking is not available for servers.
  • Tracing levels assume the server is trusted and clients are not trusted.

Example

An example using bevy to manage client and server resources.

Setup

Common

Specify all the message types in a ChannelPack. Messages are automatically serialized and deserialized, so concrete types are required.

/// Clients send these when connecting to the server.
#[derive(Serialize, Deserialize, Clone, Debug)]
pub struct TestConnectMsg(pub String);

/// Clients can send these at any time.
#[derive(Serialize, Deserialize, Clone, Debug)]
pub struct TestClientMsg(pub u64);

/// Client requests are special messages that expect a response from the server.
#[derive(Serialize, Deserialize, Clone, Debug)]
pub struct TestClientRequest(pub u64);

/// Servers can send these at any time.
#[derive(Serialize, Deserialize, Clone, Debug)]
pub struct TestServerMsg(pub u64);

/// Servers send these in response to client requests.
#[derive(Serialize, Deserialize, Clone, Debug)]
pub struct TestServerResponse(pub u64);

#[derive(Debug, Clone)]
pub struct TestChannel;
impl ChannelPack for TestChannel
{
    type ConnectMsg = TestConnectMsg;
    type ClientMsg = TestClientMsg;
    type ClientRequest = TestClientRequest;
    type ServerMsg = TestServerMsg;
    type ServerResponse = TestServerResponse;
}

Server

Prepare to make servers. We need a separate ServerFactory to embed the channel's protocol version in a centralized location.

fn server_factory() -> ServerFactory<TestChannel>
{
    // It is recommended to make server/client factories with baked-in protocol versions (e.g.
    //   with env!("CARGO_PKG_VERSION")).
    ServerFactory::<TestChannel>::new("test")
}

Make a server and insert it into an app.

fn setup_server(mut commands: Commands)
{
    let server = server_factory().new_server(
        enfync::builtin::native::TokioHandle::default(),
        "127.0.0.1:0",
        AcceptorConfig::Default,
        Authenticator::None,
        ServerConfig::default(),
    );
    commands.insert_resource(server);
}

Client

Prepare to make clients. We need a separate ClientFactory to embed the channel's protocol version, as with the server factory.

fn client_factory() -> ClientFactory<TestChannel>
{
    // You must use the same protocol version string as the server factory.
    ClientFactory::<TestChannel>::new("test")
}

Make a client and insert it into an app.

fn setup_client(mut commands: Commands)
{
    let client_id = 0u128;
    let client = client_factory().new_client(
        enfync::builtin::Handle::default(),  //automatically selects native/WASM runtime
        server.url(),
        AuthRequest::None{ client_id },
        ClientConfig::default(),
        TestConnectMsg(String::from("hello"))
    );
    commands.insert_resource(client);
}

Sending from the client

Send a message. The send method returns a MessageSignal that can be used to track the message status.

fn send_client_message(client: Res<Client<TestChannel>>)
{
    let message_signal = client.send(TestClientMsg(42));
}

Send a request. The request method returns a RequestSignal that can be used to track the request status.

fn send_client_request(client: Res<Client<TestChannel>>)
{
    let request_signal = client.request(TestClientRequest(24));
}

Sending from the Server

Send a message.

fn send_server_message(server: Res<Server<TestChannel>>)
{
    server.send(0u128, TestServerMsg(111));
}

Send a response. The RequestToken allows us to correctly associate the response with the original request. If you drop the token then the client will automatically receive a ClientEvent::Reject event and their RequestSignal will return RequestStatus::Rejected.

fn send_server_response(In(token): In<RequestToken>, server: Res<Server<TestChannel>>)
{
    server.respond(token, TestServerResponse(1));
}

Reading on the client

All client events are synchronized to ensure deterministic, unambiguous behavior.

type TestClientEvent = ClientEventFrom<TestChannel>;

fn read_on_client(mut client: ResMut<Client<TestChannel>>)
{
    while let Some(client_event) = client.next()
    {
        match client_event
        {
            TestClientEvent::Report(connection_report) => match connection_report
            {
                ClientReport::Connected                => todo!(),
                ClientReport::Disconnected             => todo!(),
                ClientReport::ClosedByServer(reason)   => todo!(),
                ClientReport::ClosedBySelf             => todo!(),
                ClientReport::IsDead(pending_requests) => todo!(),
            }
            TestClientEvent::Msg(message)                   => todo!(),
            TestClientEvent::Response(response, request_id) => todo!(),
            TestClientEvent::Ack(request_id)                => todo!(),
            TestClientEvent::Reject(request_id)             => todo!(),
            TestClientEvent::SendFailed(request_id)         => todo!(),
            TestClientEvent::ResponseLost(request_id)       => todo!(),
        }
    }
}

Reading on the server

All server events are synchronized to ensure deterministic, unambiguous behavior.

type TestServerEvent = ServerEventFrom<TestChannel>;

fn read_on_server(mut server: ResMut<Server<TestChannel>>)
{
    while let Some((client_id, server_event)) = server.next()
    {
        match server_event
        {
            TestServerEvent::Report(connection_report) => match connection_report
            {
                ServerReport::Connected(env, message) => todo!(),
                ServerReport::Disconnected            => todo!(),
            }
            TestServerEvent::Msg(message)            => todo!(),
            TestServerEvent::Request(token, request) => todo!(),
        }
    }
}

Client authentication

Servers have three options for authenticating clients:

  • Authentication::None: All connections are valid.
  • Authentication::Secret: A connection is valid if the client provides AuthRequest::Secret with a matching secret.
  • Authentication::Token: A connection is valid if the client provides AuthRequest::Token with a token produced by your backend.

Generating and managing auth tokens is very simple.

  1. Generate auth keys in your backend and setup a server.
let (privkey, pubkey) = bevy_simplenet::generate_auth_token_keys();

let server = server_factory().new_server(
    enfync::builtin::native::TokioHandle::default(),
    "127.0.0.1:0",
    AcceptorConfig::Default,
    Authenticator::Token{pubkey},
    ServerConfig::default(),
);

Typically the keypair will be generated on one frontend server, and the pubkey will be sent to other servers for running bevy_simplenet servers that will authenticate tokens.

  1. Client sends their credentials (e.g. login name and password) to your frontend.

  2. Your frontend validates the credentials and produces an auth token allowing the user's client id 123u128 to connect to your backend.

// This token expires after 10 seconds.
let token = bevy_simplenet::make_auth_token_from_lifetime(&privkey, 10, 123u128);

You send this token to the client.

  1. Client makes a bevy_simplenet client using the received token.
let client = client_factory().new_client(
    enfync::builtin::Handle::default(),
    server_url,
    AuthRequest::Token{ token },
    ClientConfig::default(),
    TestConnectMsg(String::from("hello"))
);

Note that the server_url can be transmitted alongside the token for convenience. This way clients only need to know the auth token endpoint, and you can provision backend servers as needed.

When the token expires, bevy_simplenet clients will stop automatically reconnecting on network error and instead shut down and emit ClientEvent::Report(ClientReport::IsDead(_)). You can request a new auth token and set up a new client in that event.

It is recommended to set a relatively low auth token expiry if you are concerned about DoS from clients clogging up the server's capacity, or if you have a force-disconnect/blacklist mechanism in your backend (which presumably communicates with the auth-token-producing endpoint).

TODOs

  • Add server shut down procedure.
  • Use const generics to bake protocol versions into Server and Client directly, instead of relying on factories (currently blocked by lack of robust compiler support).

Bevy compatability

bevy bevy_simplenet
0.14 v0.12 - master
0.13 v0.9 - v0.11
0.12 v0.5 - v0.8
0.11 v0 - v0.4

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Simple server/client channel implemented over websockets with support for Bevy.

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Apache-2.0, MIT licenses found

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