GosWebSocketBundle
About
GosWebSocketBundle is a Symfony bundle designed to bring together websocket functionality in a easy to use application architecture.
Much like Socket.IO, it provides both a server and client implementation ensuring you have to write as little as possible to get your application up and running.
Powered By Ratchet and Autobahn JS, with Symfony
Support
| Version | Status | Symfony Versions | Documentation |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1.x | No Longer Supported | 2.3-2.8, 3.0-3.4, 4.0-4.4 | View Docs |
| 2.x | Bug Fixes Until December 1, 2020 | 3.4, 4.4 | View Docs |
| 3.x | Actively Supported | 4.4, 5.0-5.1 | View Docs |
What can I do with this bundle?
Websockets are very helpful for applications which require live activity and updates, including:
- Chat applications
- Real time notifications
- Browser games
Built in features
- PHP Websocket server (IO / WAMP)
- PHP Websocket client (IO / WAMP)
- JavaScript Websocket client (IO / WAMP)
- PubSub Router
- Remote Procedure Calls
- User authentication
- Periodic calls
- Origin checker
- Push (amqp)
Resources
- Installation Instructions
- Client Setup
- RPC Handlers
- PubSub Topic Handlers
- Periodic Services
- Session Management & User authentication
- Server Events
- Configuration Reference
- Performance Bench
- Push integration
- SSL configuration
- Websocket Client
Code Cookbook
Installation Instructions
Step 1: Install via Composer
- If you are using Symfony 3.3 or older, you will need the 1.x version of this bundle
- If you are using Symfony 3.4 or 4.4, you should use the 2.x version of this bundle (note Symfony 4.0 thru 4.3 are no longer supported)
- If you are using Symfony 4.4 or 5.0, you should use the 3.x version of this bundle
composer require gos/web-socket-bundle
Step 2: Enable the bundle
If your application is based on the Symfony Standard structure, you will need to add the bundle and its dependency, the GosPubSubRouterBundle, to your AppKernel class' registerBundles() method.
<?php
// app/AppKernel.php
// ...
class AppKernel extends Kernel
{
public function registerBundles()
{
$bundles = [
// ...
new Gos\Bundle\PubSubRouterBundle\GosPubSubRouterBundle(),
new Gos\Bundle\WebSocketBundle\GosWebSocketBundle(),
];
// ...
}
// ...
}If your application is based on the Symfony Flex structure, the bundle should be automatically registered, otherwise you will need to add it and its dependency, the GosPubSubRouterBundle, to your config/bundles.php file.
<?php
return [
// ...
Gos\Bundle\PubSubRouterBundle\GosPubSubRouterBundle::class => ['all' => true],
Gos\Bundle\WebSocketBundle\GosWebSocketBundle::class => ['all' => true],
];Step 3: Configure the bundle
The following is the minimum configuration necessary to use the bundle. If you are using the Symfony Standard structure, this will be added to your app/config/config.yml file. If you are using the Symfony Flex structure, this will be added to your config/packages/gos_web_socket.yaml file.
gos_web_socket:
server:
port: 8080 # The port the socket server will listen on
host: 127.0.0.1 # The host ip to bind toStep 4: Launching the server
With the bundle installed and configured, you can now launch the websocket server through your Symfony application's command-line console.
php bin/console gos:websocket:serverIf everything is successful, you will see something similar to the following:
INFO [websocket] Starting web socket
INFO [websocket] Launching Ratchet on 127.0.0.1:8080 PID: 12345Congratulations, your websocket server is now running. However, you will still need to add integrations to your application to fully use the bundle.

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