To enable WebSocket support in the server, add a websocket configuration block in the server's configuration file like the following:
websocket {
# Specify a host and port to listen for websocket connections
#
# listen: "host:port"
# It can also be configured with individual parameters,
# namely host and port.
#
# host: "hostname"
port: 443
# This will optionally specify what host:port for websocket
# connections to be advertised in the cluster.
#
# advertise: "host:port"
# TLS configuration is required by default
#
tls {
cert_file: "/path/to/cert.pem"
key_file: "/path/to/key.pem"
}
# For test environments, you can disable the need for TLS
# by explicitly setting this option to `true`
#
# no_tls: true
# [Cross-origin resource sharing option](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/HTTP/CORS).
#
# IMPORTANT! This option is used only when the http request presents an Origin
# header, which is the case for web browsers. If no Origin header is present,
# this check will not be performed.
#
# When set to `true`, the HTTP origin header must match the request’s hostname.
# The default is `false`.
#
# same_origin: true
# [Cross-origin resource sharing option](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/HTTP/CORS).
#
# IMPORTANT! This option is used only when the http request presents an Origin
# header, which is the case for web browsers. If no Origin header is present,
# this check will not be performed.
#
# List of accepted origins. When empty, and `same_origin` is `false`, clients from any origin are allowed to connect.
# This list specifies the only accepted values for the client's request Origin header. The scheme,
# host and port must match. By convention, the absence of TCP port in the URL will be port 80
# for an "http://" scheme, and 443 for "https://".
#
# allowed_origins [
# "http://www.example.com"
# "https://www.other-example.com"
# ]
# This enables support for compressed websocket frames
# in the server. For compression to be used, both server
# and client have to support it.
#
# compression: true
# This is the total time allowed for the server to
# read the client request and write the response back
# to the client. This includes the time needed for the
# TLS handshake.
#
# handshake_timeout: "2s"
# Name for an HTTP cookie, that if present will be used as a client JWT.
# If the client specifies a JWT in the CONNECT protocol, this option is ignored.
# The cookie should be set by the HTTP server as described [here](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/HTTP/Cookies#restrict_access_to_cookies).
# This setting is useful when generating NATS `Bearer` client JWTs as the
# result of some authentication mechanism. The HTTP server after correct
# authentication can issue a JWT for the user, that is set securely preventing
# access by unintended scripts. Note these JWTs must be [NATS JWTs](https://docs.nats.io/nats-server/configuration/securing_nats/jwt).
#
# jwt_cookie: "my_jwt_cookie_name"
# If no user name is provided when a websocket client connects, will default
# this user name in the authentication phase. If specified, this will
# override, for websocket clients, any `no_auth_user` value defined in the
# main configuration file.
# Note that this is not compatible with running the server in operator mode.
#
# no_auth_user: "my_username_for_apps_not_providing_credentials"
# See below to know what is the normal way of limiting websocket clients
# to specific users.
# If there are no users specified in the configuration, this simple authorization
# block allows you to override the values that would be configured in the
# equivalent block in the main section.
#
# authorization {
# # If this is specified, the client has to provide the same username
# # and password to be able to connect.
# # username: "my_user_name"
# # password: "my_password"
#
# # If this is specified, the password field in the CONNECT has to
# # match this token.
# # token: "my_token"
#
# # This overrides the main's authorization timeout. For consistency
# # with the main's authorization configuration block, this is expressed
# # as a number of seconds.
# # timeout: 2.0
#}
}
Authorization of WebSocket Users
Authentication
NATS supports different forms of authentication for clients connecting over WebSocket:
username/password
token
NKEYS
client certificates
JWTs
You can get some more information about how applications connecting over WebSocket can use those different forms of authentication here
Restricting connection types
A new field when configuring users allows you to restrict which type of connections are allowed for a specific user.
If a WebSocket client were to connect and use the username foo and password foopwd, it would be accepted. Now suppose that you would want the WebSocket client to only be accepted if it connected using the username bar and password barpwd, then you would use the option allowed_connection_types to restrict which type of connections can bind to this user.
The option allowed_connection_types (also can be named connection_types or clients) as you can see is a list, and you can allow several types of clients. Suppose you want the user bar to accept both standard NATS clients and WebSocket clients, you would configure the user like this: