extern crate env_logger; /// A thread-based client + server example. It also demonstrates using a struct as a WebSocket /// handler to implement more handler methods than a closure handler allows. extern crate tetsy_ws as ws; use std::thread; use std::thread::sleep; use std::time::Duration; use ws::{connect, listen, CloseCode, Handler, Message, Result, Sender}; fn main() { // Setup logging env_logger::init(); // Server WebSocket handler struct Server { out: Sender, } impl Handler for Server { fn on_message(&mut self, msg: Message) -> Result<()> { println!("Server got message '{}'. ", msg); self.out.send(msg) } fn on_close(&mut self, code: CloseCode, reason: &str) { println!("WebSocket closing for ({:?}) {}", code, reason); println!("Shutting down server after first connection closes."); self.out.shutdown().unwrap(); } } // Server thread let server = thread::spawn(move || listen("127.0.0.1:3012", |out| Server { out }).unwrap()); // Give the server a little time to get going sleep(Duration::from_millis(10)); // Client thread let client = thread::spawn(move || { connect("ws://127.0.0.1:3012", |out| { out.send("Hello WebSocket").unwrap(); move |msg| { println!("Client got message '{}'. ", msg); out.close(CloseCode::Normal) } }).unwrap() }); let _ = server.join(); let _ = client.join(); println!("All done.") }