I recently decided to learn socket.io, to make something real-time. I wrote something up, following the Get Started page on the site, and tested it locally until I got it working properly.
I uploaded it to my server using the same process as anything else. I ran it on port 8002, and added it to my reverse proxy (using http-proxy-middleware) under /pong/*
. I then proxied /socket.io/*
to port 8002 before it worked. However after inspection with Firefox I noticed that socket.io was only using polling as a transport method and not websockets, and after some further thought I decided that sending /socket.io/*
to 8002 is not going to be good when using socket.io on other projects in the future.
So I ask, how do I get multiple socket.io programs running behind a reverse proxy, using websockets as a for transport?
proxy.js
const express = require("express")
const fs = require('fs');
const http = require('http');
const https = require('https');
const proxy = require('http-proxy-middleware');
const privateKey = fs.readFileSync('/etc/[path-to- letsencrypt]/privkey.pem', 'utf8');
const certificate = fs.readFileSync('/etc/[path-to-letsencrypt]/cert.pem', 'utf8');
const ca = fs.readFileSync('/[path-to-letsencrypt]/chain.pem', 'utf8');
var credentials = {key: privateKey, cert: certificate, ca: ca};
var app = express();
app.use(function (req, res, next) {
console.log(req.url)
next()
})
app.use("/pong/*", proxy({ target: "http://localhost:8002", pathRewrite: {"^/pong": ""}, ws:true, changeOrigin: true }))
app.use("/pnw/war/*", proxy({ target: "http://localhost:8000" }))
app.use("/pnw/nation/*", proxy({ target: "http://localhost:8001" }))
app.use(express.static("./static"))
https.createServer(credentials, app).listen(443);
// Redirect all HTTP traffic to HTTPS
http.createServer(function (req, res) {
res.writeHead(301, { "Location": "https://" + req.headers['host'] + req.url });
res.end();
}).listen(80);
pong.js
var app = require('express')();
var http = require('http').Server(app);
var io = require('socket.io')(http, {
path: "/pong/"
});
app.get('/', function(req, res){
res.sendFile(__dirname + '/index.html');
});
http.listen(8002, function(){
console.log('listening on *:8002');
});
index.html
<script src="/pong/socket.io.js"></script>
<script>
var socket = io({
// transports: ['websocket'], upgrade: false, (using for testing)
path:"/pong"
})
// ...
</script>
What I have currently comes from following the answer to this question: Setting up multiple socket.io/node.js apps on an Apache server?
However in the firefox console I get a warning which reads:
Loading failed for the <script> with source “https://curlip.xyz/pong/socket.io.js”
, followed by an error io is not defined
. In the network tab getting socket.io.js is showing a 404.
So what I believe is happening is that because express is capturing the requests for /, socket.io cannot (for some reason) server socket.io.js. However when I changed / to /index.html
and loaded that there was no change.