websockify 0.5.1+dfsg1-2 source package in Ubuntu

Changelog

websockify (0.5.1+dfsg1-2) unstable; urgency=low


  * Added upstream patch to fix rebind.so not found (Closes: #719889).

 -- Thomas Goirand <email address hidden>  Sat, 28 Sep 2013 22:45:51 +0800

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Uploaded by:
PKG OpenStack
Uploaded to:
Sid
Original maintainer:
PKG OpenStack
Architectures:
any
Section:
misc
Urgency:
Low Urgency

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Series Pocket Published Component Section

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File Size SHA-256 Checksum
websockify_0.5.1+dfsg1-2.dsc 1.5 KiB 7e3af90a9deab17b2def144d781729245042bd47aabfb80014b85df8699e414e
websockify_0.5.1+dfsg1.orig.tar.xz 88.5 KiB 83e51114370fbc6febcfffaf17a3fa51d804e2d08536db428c338e2234b17811
websockify_0.5.1+dfsg1-2.debian.tar.gz 10.1 KiB b8b1db8dddd8edfa44e522bb1701667b7d987c15aed509d24adbbdba54fae6bf

Available diffs

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Binary packages built by this source

websockify: WebSockets support for any application/server

 websockify was formerly named wsproxy and was part of the noVNC project.
 .
 At the most basic level, websockify just translates WebSockets traffic to
 normal socket traffic. Websockify accepts the WebSockets handshake, parses it,
 and then begins forwarding traffic between the client and the target in both
 directions.
 .
 Websockify supports all versions of the WebSockets protocol (Hixie and HyBi).
 The older Hixie versions of the protocol only support UTF-8 text payloads. In
 order to transport binary data over UTF-8 an encoding must used to encapsulate
 the data within UTF-8.
 .
 With Hixie clients, Websockify uses base64 to encode all traffic to and from
 the client. This does not affect the data between websockify and the server.
 .
 With HyBi clients, websockify negotiates whether to base64 encode traffic to
 and from the client via the subprotocol header (Sec-WebSocket-Protocol). The
 valid subprotocol values are 'binary' and 'base64' and if the client sends
 both then the server (the Python implementation) will prefer 'binary'. The
 'binary' subprotocol indicates that the data will be sent raw using binary
 WebSocket frames. Some HyBi clients (such as the Flash fallback and older
 Chrome and iOS versions) do not support binary data which is why the
 negotiation is necessary.