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313 lines
11 KiB
ReStructuredText
313 lines
11 KiB
ReStructuredText
Generic Consumers
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=================
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Much like Django's class-based views, Channels has class-based consumers.
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They provide a way for you to arrange code so it's highly modifiable and
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inheritable, at the slight cost of it being harder to figure out the execution
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path.
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We recommend you use them if you find them valuable; normal function-based
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consumers are also entirely valid, however, and may result in more readable
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code for simpler tasks.
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There is one base generic consumer class, ``BaseConsumer``, that provides
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the pattern for method dispatch and is the thing you can build entirely
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custom consumers on top of, and then protocol-specific subclasses that provide
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extra utility - for example, the ``WebsocketConsumer`` provides automatic
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group management for the connection.
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When you use class-based consumers in :doc:`routing <routing>`, you need
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to use ``route_class`` rather than ``route``; ``route_class`` knows how to
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talk to the class-based consumer and extract the list of channels it needs
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to listen on from it directly, rather than making you pass it in explicitly.
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Here's a routing example::
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from channels import route, route_class
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channel_routing = [
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route_class(consumers.ChatServer, path=r"^/chat/"),
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route("websocket.connect", consumers.ws_connect, path=r"^/$"),
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]
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Class-based consumers are instantiated once for each message they consume,
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so it's safe to store things on ``self`` (in fact, ``self.message`` is the
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current message by default, and ``self.kwargs`` are the keyword arguments
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passed in from the routing).
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Base
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----
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The ``BaseConsumer`` class is the foundation of class-based consumers, and what
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you can inherit from if you wish to build your own entirely from scratch.
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You use it like this::
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from channels.generic import BaseConsumer
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class MyConsumer(BaseConsumer):
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method_mapping = {
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"channel.name.here": "method_name",
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}
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def method_name(self, message, **kwargs):
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pass
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All you need to define is the ``method_mapping`` dictionary, which maps
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channel names to method names. The base code will take care of the dispatching
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for you, and set ``self.message`` to the current message as well.
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If you want to perfom more complicated routing, you'll need to override the
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``dispatch()`` and ``channel_names()`` methods in order to do the right thing;
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remember, though, your channel names cannot change during runtime and must
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always be the same for as long as your process runs.
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``BaseConsumer`` and all other generic consumers than inherit from it provide
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two instance variables on the class:
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* ``self.message``, the :ref:`Message object <ref-message>` representing the
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message the consumer was called for.
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* ``self.kwargs``, keyword arguments from the :doc:`routing`
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WebSockets
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----------
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There are two WebSockets generic consumers; one that provides group management,
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simpler send/receive methods, and basic method routing, and a subclass which
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additionally automatically serializes all messages sent and receives using JSON.
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The basic WebSocket generic consumer is used like this::
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from channels.generic.websockets import WebsocketConsumer
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class MyConsumer(WebsocketConsumer):
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# Set to True to automatically port users from HTTP cookies
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# (you don't need channel_session_user, this implies it)
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http_user = True
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# Set to True if you want them, else leave out
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strict_ordering = False
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slight_ordering = False
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def connection_groups(self, **kwargs):
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"""
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Called to return the list of groups to automatically add/remove
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this connection to/from.
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"""
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return ["test"]
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def connect(self, message, **kwargs):
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"""
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Perform things on connection start
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"""
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# Accept the connection; this is done by default if you don't override
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# the connect function.
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self.message.reply_channel.send({"accept": True})
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def receive(self, text=None, bytes=None, **kwargs):
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"""
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Called when a message is received with either text or bytes
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filled out.
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"""
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# Simple echo
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self.send(text=text, bytes=bytes)
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def disconnect(self, message, **kwargs):
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"""
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Perform things on connection close
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"""
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pass
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You can call ``self.send`` inside the class to send things to the connection's
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``reply_channel`` automatically. Any group names returned from ``connection_groups``
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are used to add the socket to when it connects and to remove it from when it
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disconnects; you get keyword arguments too if your URL path, say, affects
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which group to talk to.
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Additionally, the property ``self.path`` is always set to the current URL path.
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The JSON-enabled consumer looks slightly different::
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from channels.generic.websockets import JsonWebsocketConsumer
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class MyConsumer(JsonWebsocketConsumer):
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# Set to True if you want them, else leave out
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strict_ordering = False
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slight_ordering = False
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def connection_groups(self, **kwargs):
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"""
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Called to return the list of groups to automatically add/remove
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this connection to/from.
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"""
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return ["test"]
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def connect(self, message, **kwargs):
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"""
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Perform things on connection start
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"""
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pass
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def receive(self, content, **kwargs):
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"""
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Called when a message is received with decoded JSON content
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"""
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# Simple echo
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self.send(content)
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def disconnect(self, message, **kwargs):
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"""
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Perform things on connection close
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"""
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pass
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For this subclass, ``receive`` only gets a ``content`` argument that is the
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already-decoded JSON as Python datastructures; similarly, ``send`` now only
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takes a single argument, which it JSON-encodes before sending down to the
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client.
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Note that this subclass still can't intercept ``Group.send()`` calls to make
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them into JSON automatically, but it does provide ``self.group_send(name, content)``
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that will do this for you if you call it explicitly.
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``self.close()`` is also provided to easily close the WebSocket from the
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server end with an optional status code once you are done with it.
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.. _multiplexing:
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WebSocket Multiplexing
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----------------------
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Channels provides a standard way to multiplex different data streams over
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a single WebSocket, called a ``Demultiplexer``.
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It expects JSON-formatted WebSocket frames with two keys, ``stream`` and
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``payload``, and will match the ``stream`` against the mapping to find a
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channel name. It will then forward the message onto that channel while
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preserving ``reply_channel``, so you can hook consumers up to them directly
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in the ``routing.py`` file, and use authentication decorators as you wish.
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Example using class-based consumer::
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from channels.generic.websockets import WebsocketDemultiplexer, JsonWebsocketConsumer
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class EchoConsumer(websockets.JsonWebsocketConsumer):
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def connect(self, message, multiplexer=None, **kwargs):
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# Send data with the multiplexer
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multiplexer.send({"status": "I just connected!"})
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def disconnect(self, message, multiplexer=None, **kwargs):
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print("Stream %s is closed" % multiplexer.stream)
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def receive(self, content, multiplexer=None, **kwargs):
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# Simple echo
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multiplexer.send({"original_message": content})
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class AnotherConsumer(websockets.JsonWebsocketConsumer):
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def receive(self, content, multiplexer=None, **kwargs):
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# Some other actions here
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pass
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class Demultiplexer(WebsocketDemultiplexer):
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# Wire your JSON consumers here: {stream_name : consumer}
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consumers = {
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"echo": EchoConsumer,
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"other": AnotherConsumer,
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}
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The ``multiplexer`` allows the consumer class to be independant of the stream name.
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It holds the stream name and the demultiplexer on the attributes ``stream`` and ``demultiplexer``.
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The :doc:`data binding <binding>` code will also send out messages to clients
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in the same format, and you can encode things in this format yourself by
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using the ``WebsocketDemultiplexer.encode`` class method.
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Sessions and Users
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------------------
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If you wish to use ``channel_session`` or ``channel_session_user`` with a
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class-based consumer, simply set one of the variables in the class body::
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class MyConsumer(WebsocketConsumer):
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channel_session_user = True
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This will run the appropriate decorator around your handler methods, and provide
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``message.channel_session`` and ``message.user`` on the message object - both
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the one passed in to your handler as an argument as well as ``self.message``,
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as they point to the same instance.
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And if you just want to use the user from the django session, add ``http_user``::
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class MyConsumer(WebsocketConsumer):
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http_user = True
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This will give you ``message.user``, which will be the same as ``request.user``
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would be on a regular View.
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Applying Decorators
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-------------------
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To apply decorators to a class-based consumer, you'll have to wrap a functional
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part of the consumer; in this case, ``get_handler`` is likely the place you
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want to override; like so::
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class MyConsumer(WebsocketConsumer):
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def get_handler(self, *args, **kwargs):
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handler = super(MyConsumer, self).get_handler(*args, **kwargs)
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return your_decorator(handler)
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You can also use the Django ``method_decorator`` utility to wrap methods that
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have ``message`` as their first positional argument - note that it won't work
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for more high-level methods, like ``WebsocketConsumer.receive``.
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As route
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--------
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Instead of making routes using ``route_class`` you may use the ``as_route`` shortcut.
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This function takes route filters (:ref:`filters`) as kwargs and returns
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``route_class``. For example::
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from . import consumers
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channel_routing = [
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consumers.ChatServer.as_route(path=r"^/chat/"),
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]
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Use the ``attrs`` dict keyword for dynamic class attributes. For example you have
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the generic consumer::
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class MyGenericConsumer(WebsocketConsumer):
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group = 'default'
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group_prefix = ''
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def connection_groups(self, **kwargs):
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return ['_'.join(self.group_prefix, self.group)]
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You can create consumers with different ``group`` and ``group_prefix`` with ``attrs``,
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like so::
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from . import consumers
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channel_routing = [
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consumers.MyGenericConsumer.as_route(path=r"^/path/1/",
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attrs={'group': 'one', 'group_prefix': 'pre'}),
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consumers.MyGenericConsumer.as_route(path=r"^/path/2/",
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attrs={'group': 'two', 'group_prefix': 'public'}),
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]
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