Embed your Go HTTP handlers in a ServiceWorker (using WebAssembly) and emulate an HTTP server!
- Hello example (sources)
- Hello example with state (sources)
- Hello example with state and keepalive (sources)
- 😺 Catption generator example (sources)
- Random password generator web server (sources forked from jbarham/random-password-please)
Talk given at the Go devroom of FOSDEM 2021 explaining how go-wasm-http-server
works:
The slides are available here.
go-wasm-http-server
can help you put up a demonstration for a project without actually running a Go HTTP server.
go-wasm-http-server
requires you to build your Go application to WebAssembly, so you need to make sure your code is compatible:
- no C bindings
- no System dependencies such as file system or network (database server for example)
In your Go code, replace http.ListenAndServe()
(or net.Listen()
+ http.Serve()
) by wasmhttp.Serve():
📄 server.go
// +build !js,!wasm
package main
import (
"net/http"
)
func main() {
// Define handlers...
http.ListenAndServe(":8080", nil)
}
becomes:
📄 server_js_wasm.go
// +build js,wasm
package main
import (
wasmhttp "github.com/nlepage/go-wasm-http-server/v2"
)
func main() {
// Define handlers...
wasmhttp.Serve(nil)
}
You may want to use build tags as shown above (or file name suffixes) in order to be able to build both to WebAssembly and other targets.
Then build your WebAssembly binary:
GOOS=js GOARCH=wasm go build -o server.wasm .
Create a ServiceWorker file with the following code:
📄 sw.js
importScripts('https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/gh/golang/[email protected]/misc/wasm/wasm_exec.js')
importScripts('https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/gh/nlepage/[email protected]/sw.js')
registerWasmHTTPListener('path/to/server.wasm')
By default the server will deploy at the ServiceWorker's scope root, check registerWasmHTTPListener()
's API for more information.
You may want to add these additional event listeners in your ServiceWorker:
// Skip installed stage and jump to activating stage
addEventListener('install', (event) => {
event.waitUntil(skipWaiting())
})
// Start controlling clients as soon as the SW is activated
addEventListener('activate', event => {
event.waitUntil(clients.claim())
})
In your web page(s), register the ServiceWorker:
<script>
// By default the ServiceWorker's scope will be "server/"
navigator.serviceWorker.register('server/sw.js')
</script>
Now your web page(s) may start fetching from the server:
// The server will receive a request for "/path/to/resource"
fetch('server/path/to/resource').then(res => {
// use response...
})
For Go API see pkg.go.dev/github.com/nlepage/go-wasm-http-server
Instantiates and runs the WebAssembly module at wasmUrl
, and registers a fetch listener forwarding requests to the WebAssembly module's server.
⚠ This function must be called only once in a ServiceWorker, if you want to register several servers you must use several ServiceWorkers.
The server will be "deployed" at the root of the ServiceWorker's scope by default, base
may be used to deploy the server at a subpath of the scope.
See ServiceWorkerContainer.register() for more information about the scope of a ServiceWorker.
URL string of the WebAssembly module, example: "path/to/my-module.wasm"
.
An optional object containing:
base
(string
): Base path of the server, relative to the ServiceWorker's scope.args
(string[]
): Arguments for the WebAssembly module.
👤 Nicolas Lepage
- Website: https://nicolas.lepage.dev/
- Twitter: @njblepage
- Github: @nlepage
Contributions, issues and feature requests are welcome!
Feel free to check issues page.
Give a ⭐️ if this project helped you!
Copyright © 2021 Nicolas Lepage.
This project is Apache 2.0 licensed.
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