Skip to content

Broadcast channels for async web apps. 📢

License

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

permitio/broadcaster

 
 

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 

History

76 Commits
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

Broadcaster (Permit fork)

This is a fork of encode/broadcaster.


Broadcaster helps you develop realtime streaming functionality by providing a simple broadcast API onto a number of different backend services.

It currently supports Redis PUB/SUB, Apache Kafka, Apache Pulsar and Postgres LISTEN/NOTIFY, plus a simple in-memory backend, that you can use for local development or during testing.

WebSockets Demo

Here's a complete example of the backend code for a simple websocket chat app:

app.py

# Requires: `starlette`, `uvicorn`, `jinja2`
# Run with `uvicorn example:app`
from broadcaster import Broadcast
from starlette.applications import Starlette
from starlette.concurrency import run_until_first_complete
from starlette.routing import Route, WebSocketRoute
from starlette.templating import Jinja2Templates


broadcast = Broadcast("redis://localhost:6379")
templates = Jinja2Templates("templates")


async def homepage(request):
    template = "index.html"
    context = {"request": request}
    return templates.TemplateResponse(template, context)


async def chatroom_ws(websocket):
    await websocket.accept()
    await run_until_first_complete(
        (chatroom_ws_receiver, {"websocket": websocket}),
        (chatroom_ws_sender, {"websocket": websocket}),
    )


async def chatroom_ws_receiver(websocket):
    async for message in websocket.iter_text():
        await broadcast.publish(channel="chatroom", message=message)


async def chatroom_ws_sender(websocket):
    async with broadcast.subscribe(channel="chatroom") as subscriber:
        async for event in subscriber:
            await websocket.send_text(event.message)


routes = [
    Route("/", homepage),
    WebSocketRoute("/", chatroom_ws, name='chatroom_ws'),
]


app = Starlette(
    routes=routes, on_startup=[broadcast.connect], on_shutdown=[broadcast.disconnect],
)

The HTML template for the front end is available here, and is adapted from Pieter Noordhuis's PUB/SUB demo.

Requirements

Python 3.7+

Installation

  • pip install permit-broadcaster
  • pip install permit-broadcaster[redis]
  • pip install permit-broadcaster[pulsar]
  • pip install permit-broadcaster[postgres]
  • pip install permit-broadcaster[kafka]

Available backends

  • Broadcast('memory://')
  • Broadcast("redis://localhost:6379")
  • Broadcast("pulsar://localhost:6650")
  • Broadcast("postgres://localhost:5432/broadcaster")
  • Broadcast("kafka://localhost:9092")
  • Broadcast("kafka://broker_1:9092,broker_2:9092")

Kafka environment variables

The following environment variables are exposed to allow SASL authentication with Kafka (along with their default assignment):

KAFKA_SECURITY_PROTOCOL=PLAINTEXT   # PLAINTEXT, SASL_PLAINTEXT, SASL_SSL
KAFKA_SASL_MECHANISM=PLAIN   # PLAIN, SCRAM-SHA-256, SCRAM-SHA-512
KAFKA_PLAIN_USERNAME=None   # any str
KAFKA_PLAIN_PASSWORD=None   # any str
KAFKA_SSL_CAFILE=None   # CA Certificate file path for kafka connection
KAFKA_SSL_CAPATH=None   # Path to directory of trusted PEM certificates for kafka connection
KAFKA_SSL_CERTFILE=None   # Public Certificate path matching key to use for Kafka connection in PEM format
KAFKA_SSL_KEYFILE=None   # Private key path to use for Kafka connection in PEM format
KAFKA_SSL_KEY_PASSWORD=None   # Private key password

For full details refer to the (AIOKafka options)[https://aiokafka.readthedocs.io/en/stable/api.html#producer-class] where the variable name matches the capitalised env var with an additional KAFKA_ prefix. For SSL properties see (AIOKafka SSL Context)[https://aiokafka.readthedocs.io/en/stable/api.html#aiokafka.helpers.create_ssl_context].

Apache Pulsar

Support for Apache Pulsar, a distributed messaging system, has been added.

To use Pulsar as a backend, ensure you have the necessary package installed:

pip install permit-broadcaster[pulsar]

You will also need a running Pulsar instance. Follow the official Pulsar installation guide for detailed setup instructions. You can also start Pulsar via Docker using the provided docker-compose.yaml file in the repository:

docker-compose up pulsar
# The same applies for other services...

In the Available backends section, add:

Broadcast("pulsar://localhost:6650")

Ensure you have a Pulsar server running before executing this example.

Updated Changes

  • Added Pulsar: Apache Pulsar is now available as a backend in Broadcaster.

Where next?

At the moment broadcaster is in Alpha, and should be considered a working design document.

The API should be considered subject to change. If you do want to use Broadcaster in its current state, make sure to strictly pin your requirements to broadcaster==0.2.0.

To be more capable we'd really want to add some additional backends, provide API support for reading recent event history from persistent stores, and provide a serialization/deserialization API...

  • Serialization / deserialization to support broadcasting structured data.
  • Backends for Redis Streams, Apache Kafka, and RabbitMQ.
  • Add support for subscribe('chatroom', history=100) for backends which provide persistence. (Redis Streams, Apache Kafka) This will allow applications to subscribe to channel updates, while also being given an initial window onto the most recent events. We might also want to support some basic paging operations, to allow applications to scan back in the event history.
  • Support for pattern subscribes in backends that support it.

About

Broadcast channels for async web apps. 📢

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • Python 69.4%
  • HTML 15.8%
  • Shell 14.8%