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Autobahn|Java

Client library providing WAMP on Java 8 (Netty) and Android, plus (secure) WebSocket for Android.

Docker Hub | Travis Docs


Autobahn|Java is a subproject of the Autobahn project and provides open-source client implementations for

running on Android and Netty/Java8/JVM.

The WebSocket layer is using a callback based user API, and is specifically written for Android. Eg it does not run any network stuff on the main (UI) thread.

The WAMP layer is using Java 8 CompletableFuture for WAMP actions (call, register, publish and subscribe) and the Observer pattern for WAMP session, subscription and registration lifecycle events.

The library is MIT licensed, maintained by the Crossbar.io Project, tested using the AutobahnTestsuite and published as a JAR to Maven and as a Docker toolchain image to Dockerhub.


Download

Grab via Maven:

<dependency>
    <groupId>io.crossbar.autobahn</groupId>
    <artifactId>autobahn-android</artifactId>
    <version>18.5.1</version>
</dependency>

Gradle:

dependencies {
    implementation 'io.crossbar.autobahn:autobahn-android:18.5.1'
}

For non-android systems use artifactID autobahn-java or just Download the latest JAR

Getting Started

The demo clients are easy to run, you only need make and docker installed to get things rolling.

$ make crossbar # Starts crossbar in a docker container
$ make python # Starts a python based WAMP components that provides calls for the Java demo client

and finally

$ make java # Starts the java (Netty) based demo client that performs WAMP actions

Show me some code

The code in demo-gallery contains some examples on how to use the autobahn library, it also contains convenience methods to use. Below is a basic set of code examples showing all 4 WAMP actions.

Subscribe to a topic

public void demonstrateSubscribe(Session session, SessionDetails details) {
    // Subscribe to topic to receive its events.
    CompletableFuture<Subscription> subFuture = session.subscribe("com.myapp.hello",
            this::onEvent);
    subFuture.whenComplete((subscription, throwable) -> {
        if (throwable == null) {
            // We have successfully subscribed.
            System.out.println("Subscribed to topic " + subscription.topic);
        } else {
            // Something went bad.
            throwable.printStackTrace();
        }
    });
}

private void onEvent(List<Object> args, Map<String, Object> kwargs, EventDetails details) {
    System.out.println(String.format("Got event: %s", args.get(0)));
}

Since we are only accessing args in onEvent(), we could simplify it like:

private void onEvent(List<Object> args) {
    System.out.println(String.format("Got event: %s", args.get(0)));
}

Publish to a topic

public void demonstratePublish(Session session, SessionDetails details) {
    // Publish to a topic that takes a single arguments
    List<Object> args = Arrays.asList("Hello World!", 900, "UNIQUE");
    CompletableFuture<Publication> pubFuture = session.publish("com.myapp.hello", args);
    pubFuture.thenAccept(publication -> System.out.println("Published successfully"));
    // Shows we can separate out exception handling
    pubFuture.exceptionally(throwable -> {
        throwable.printStackTrace();
        return null;
    });
}

A simpler call would look like:

public void demonstratePublish(Session session, SessionDetails details) {
    CompletableFuture<Publication> pubFuture = session.publish("com.myapp.hello", "Hi!");
    ...
}

Register a procedure

public void demonstrateRegister(Session session, SessionDetails details) {
    // Register a procedure.
    CompletableFuture<Registration> regFuture = session.register("com.myapp.add2", this::add2);
    regFuture.thenAccept(registration ->
            System.out.println("Successfully registered procedure: " + registration.procedure));
}

private CompletableFuture<InvocationResult> add2(
        List<Object> args, Map<String, Object> kwargs, InvocationDetails details) {
    int res = (int) args.get(0) + (int) args.get(1);
    List<Object> arr = new ArrayList<>();
    arr.add(res);
    return CompletableFuture.completedFuture(new InvocationResult(arr));
}

A very precise add2 may look like:

private List<Object> add2(List<Integer> args, InvocationDetails details) {
    int res = args.get(0) + args.get(1);
    return Arrays.asList(res, details.session.getID(), "Java");
}

Call a procedure

public void demonstrateCall(Session session, SessionDetails details) {
    // Call a remote procedure.
    CompletableFuture<CallResult> callFuture = session.call("com.myapp.add2", 10, 20);
    callFuture.thenAccept(callResult ->
            System.out.println(String.format("Call result: %s", callResult.results.get(0))));
}

Connecting the dots

public void main() {
    // Create a session object
    Session session = new Session();
    // Add all onJoin listeners
    session.addOnJoinListener(this::demonstrateSubscribe);
    session.addOnJoinListener(this::demonstratePublish);
    session.addOnJoinListener(this::demonstrateCall);
    session.addOnJoinListener(this::demonstrateRegister);

    // finally, provide everything to a Client and connect
    Client client = new Client(session, url, realm);
    CompletableFuture<ExitInfo> exitInfoCompletableFuture = client.connect();
}

Authentication

Authentication is simple, we just need to create an object of the desired authenticator and pass that to the Client

Ticket Auth

public void main() {
    ...
    IAuthenticator authenticator = new TicketAuth(authid, ticket);
    Client client = new Client(session, url, realm, authenticator);
    CompletableFuture<ExitInfo> exitInfoCompletableFuture = client.connect();
}

Challenge Response Auth

public void main() {
    ...
    IAuthenticator authenticator = new ChallengeResponseAuth(authid, secret);
    Client client = new Client(session, url, realm, authenticator);
    CompletableFuture<ExitInfo> exitInfoCompletableFuture = client.connect();
}

Cryptosign Auth

public void main() {
    ...
    IAuthenticator authenticator = new CryptosignAuth(authid, privkey, pubkey);
    Client client = new Client(session, url, realm, authenticator);
    CompletableFuture<ExitInfo> exitInfoCompletableFuture = client.connect();
}

You can also provide a list of Authenticators

public void main() {
    ...
    List<IAuthenticator> authenticators = new ArrayList<>();
    authenticators.add(new TicketAuth(authid, ticket));
    authenticators.add(new CryptosignAuth(authid, privkey, pubkey));
    Client client = new Client(session, url, realm, authenticators);
    CompletableFuture<ExitInfo> exitInfoCompletableFuture = client.connect();
}

Autobahn also supports POJOs

Here is how to call a remote procedure that returns a list of Person POJOs

// Call a remote proedure that returns a Person with id 1
CompletableFuture<Person> callFuture = mSession.call("com.example.get_person", 1);
callFuture.whenCompleteAsync((person, throwable) -> {
    if (throwable != null) {
        // handle error
    } else {
        // success!
        // do something with person
    }
}, mExecutor);
// call a remote procedure that returns a List<Person>
CompletableFuture<List<Person>> callFuture = mSession.call(
        // remote procedure to call
        "com.example.get_persons_by_department",

        // positional call arguments
        new ArrayList<Object>() {List.of("department-7")},

        // call return type
        new TypeReference<List<Person>>() {}
);

callFuture.whenCompleteAsync((persons, throwable) -> {
    if (throwable != null) {
        // handle error
    } else {
        // success!
        for (Person person: persons) {
            // do something with person
        }
    }
}, mExecutor);

Also register a procedure that returns a Person

private Person get_person() {
    return new Person("john", "doe", "hr");
}

private void main() {
    CompletableFuture<Registration> regFuture = session.register(
            "io.crossbar.example.get_person", this::get_person);
    regFuture.whenComplete((registration, throwable) -> {
        System.out.println(String.format(
                "Registered procedure %s", registration.procedure));
    });
}

WebSocket on Android

TBD


--

Building from source

Building Autobahn is pretty simple

Android build

For Android, we recommend to use Android Studio. Just import the project in Android Studio, it will tell you if there are any missing dependencies, install them and then just build the project from Build > Rebuild Project and you will have the aar artifact in autobahn/build/outputs/aar/

Netty build

To produce a build for non-android systems make sure you have docker and make installed then just use run below command on the root directory of the project

make build_autobahn

and that will output the jar file in autobahn/build/libs/.

Get in touch

Get in touch on IRC #autobahn on chat.freenode.net or join the mailing list.


Version 1

Version 1 of this library is still in the repo here, but is no longer maintained.

Version 1 only supported non-secure WebSocket on Android and only supported WAMP v1.

Both of these issues are fixed in the (current) version of Autobahn|Java.


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