curl_ws_meta - meta data WebSocket information
#include <curl/curl.h>
const struct curl_ws_frame *curl_ws_meta(CURL *curl);
When the write callback (CURLOPT_WRITEFUNCTION(3)) is
invoked on received WebSocket traffic, curl_ws_meta(3) can be called
from within the callback to provide additional information about the current
frame.
This function only works from within the callback, and only when
receiving WebSocket data.
This function requires an easy handle as input argument for
libcurl to know what transfer the question is about, but as there is no such
pointer provided to the callback by libcurl itself, applications that want
to use curl_ws_meta(3) need to pass it on to the callback on its
own.
struct curl_ws_frame {
int age;
int flags;
curl_off_t offset;
curl_off_t bytesleft;
size_t len;
};
- age
- This field specify the age of this struct. It is always zero for now.
- flags
- This is a bitmask with individual bits set that describes the WebSocket
data. See the list below.
- offset
- When this chunk is a continuation of frame data already delivered, this is
the offset into the final frame data where this piece belongs to.
- bytesleft
- If this is not a complete fragment, the bytesleft field informs
about how many additional bytes are expected to arrive before this
fragment is complete.
- len
- The length of the current data chunk.
The message type flags (CURLWS_TEXT/BINARY/CLOSE/PING/PONG)
are mutually exclusive.
- CURLWS_TEXT
- This is a message with text data. Note that this makes a difference to
WebSocket but libcurl itself does not make any verification of the content
or precautions that you actually receive valid UTF-8 content.
- CURLWS_BINARY
- This is a message with binary data.
- CURLWS_CLOSE
- This is a close message. No more data follows.
It may contain a 2-byte unsigned integer in network byte order
that indicates the close reason and may additionally contain up to 123
bytes of further textual payload for a total of at most 125 bytes.
libcurl does not verify that the textual description is valid UTF-8.
- CURLWS_PING
- This is a ping message. It may contain up to 125 bytes of payload text.
libcurl does not verify that the payload is valid UTF-8.
Upon receiving a ping message, libcurl automatically responds
with a pong message unless the CURLWS_NOAUTOPONG or
CURLWS_RAW_MODE bit of CURLOPT_WS_OPTIONS(3) is set.
- CURLWS_PONG
- This is a pong message. It may contain up to 125 bytes of payload text.
libcurl does not verify that the payload is valid UTF-8.
- CURLWS_CONT
- Can only occur in conjunction with CURLWS_TEXT or CURLWS_BINARY.
This is not the final fragment of the message, it implies that
there is another fragment coming as part of the same message. The
application must reassemble the fragments to receive the complete
message.
Only a single fragmented message can be transmitted at a time,
but it may be interrupted by CURLWS_CLOSE, CURLWS_PING or CURLWS_PONG
frames.
This functionality affects ws only
/* we pass a pointer to this struct to the callback */
struct customdata {
CURL *easy;
void *ptr;
};
static size_t writecb(char *buffer,
size_t size, size_t nitems, void *p)
{
struct customdata *c = (struct customdata *)p;
const struct curl_ws_frame *m = curl_ws_meta(c->easy);
printf("flags: %x\n", m->flags);
return 0;
}
int main(void)
{
CURL *curl = curl_easy_init();
if(curl) {
struct customdata custom;
custom.easy = curl;
custom.ptr = NULL;
curl_easy_setopt(curl, CURLOPT_WRITEFUNCTION, writecb);
curl_easy_setopt(curl, CURLOPT_WRITEDATA, &custom);
curl_easy_perform(curl);
}
return 0;
}
This function returns a pointer to a curl_ws_frame struct
with read-only information that is valid for this specific callback
invocation. If it cannot return this information, or if the function is
called in the wrong context, it returns NULL.
curl_easy_getinfo(3), curl_easy_setopt(3),
curl_ws_recv(3), curl_ws_send(3), libcurl-ws(3)