- Introduction to WebSockets
- Browser to Workhorse
- Workhorse to GitLab
- Workhorse to the WebSocket server
Websocket channel support for Workhorse
In some cases, GitLab can provide the following through a WebSocket:
- In-browser terminal access to an environment: a running server or container, onto which a project has been deployed.
- Access to services running in CI.
Workhorse manages the WebSocket upgrade and long-lived connection to the websocket connection, which frees up GitLab to process other requests. This document outlines the architecture of these connections.
Introduction to WebSockets
Websockets are an “upgraded” HTTP/1.1
request. They permit bidirectional
communication between a client and a server. Websockets are not HTTP.
Clients can send messages (known as frames) to the server at any time, and
vice versa. Client messages are not necessarily requests, and server messages are
not necessarily responses. WebSocket URLs have schemes like ws://
(unencrypted) or
wss://
(TLS-secured).
When requesting an upgrade to WebSocket, the browser sends a HTTP/1.1
request like this:
GET /path.ws HTTP/1.1
Connection: upgrade
Upgrade: websocket
Sec-WebSocket-Protocol: terminal.gitlab.com
# More headers, including security measures
At this point, the connection is still HTTP, so this is a request.
The server can send a standard HTTP response, such as 404 Not Found
or
500 Internal Server Error
.
If the server decides to permit the upgrade, it sends a HTTP
101 Switching Protocols
response. From this point, the connection is no longer
HTTP. It is now a WebSocket and frames, not HTTP requests, flow over it. The connection
persists until the client or server closes the connection.
In addition to the sub-protocol, individual websocket frames may also specify a message type, such as:
-
BinaryMessage
-
TextMessage
-
Ping
-
Pong
-
Close
Only binary frames can contain arbitrary data. The frames are expected to be valid UTF-8 strings, in addition to any sub-protocol expectations.
Browser to Workhorse
Using the terminal as an example:
- GitLab serves a JavaScript terminal emulator to the browser on a URL like
https://gitlab.com/group/project/-/environments/1/terminal
. - This URL opens a websocket connection to
wss://gitlab.com/group/project/-/environments/1/terminal.ws
. This endpoint exists only in Workhorse, and doesn’t exist in GitLab. - When receiving the connection, Workhorse first performs a
preauthentication
request to GitLab to confirm the client is authorized to access the requested terminal:- If the client has the appropriate permissions and the terminal exists, GitLab responds with a successful response that includes details of the terminal the client should be connected to.
- Otherwise, Workhorse returns an appropriate HTTP error response.
- If GitLab returns valid terminal details to Workhorse, it:
- Connects to the specified terminal.
- Upgrades the browser to a WebSocket.
- Proxies between the two connections for as long as the browser’s credentials are valid.
- Send regular
PingMessage
control frames to the browser, to prevent intervening proxies from terminating the connection while the browser is present.
The browser must request an upgrade with a specific sub-protocol:
terminal.gitlab.com
This sub-protocol considers TextMessage
frames to be invalid. Control frames,
such as PingMessage
or CloseMessage
, have their usual meanings.
-
BinaryMessage
frames sent from the browser to the server are arbitrary text input. -
BinaryMessage
frames sent from the server to the browser are arbitrary text output.
These frames are expected to contain ANSI text control codes and may be in any encoding.
base64.terminal.gitlab.com
This sub-protocol considers BinaryMessage
frames to be invalid.
Control frames, such as PingMessage
or CloseMessage
, have
their usual meanings.
-
TextMessage
frames sent from the browser to the server are base64-encoded arbitrary text input. The server must base64-decode them before inputting them. -
TextMessage
frames sent from the server to the browser are base64-encoded arbitrary text output. The browser must base64-decode them before outputting them.
In their base64-encoded form, these frames are expected to contain ANSI terminal control codes, and may be in any encoding.
Workhorse to GitLab
Using the terminal as an example, before upgrading the browser,
Workhorse sends a standard HTTP request to GitLab on a URL like
https://gitlab.com/group/project/environments/1/terminal.ws/authorize
.
This returns a JSON response containing details of where the
terminal can be found, and how to connect it. In particular,
the following details are returned in case of success:
- WebSocket URL to connect** to, such as
wss://example.com/terminals/1.ws?tty=1
. - WebSocket sub-protocols to support, such as
["channel.k8s.io"]
. - Headers to send, such as
Authorization: Token xxyyz
. - Optional. Certificate authority to verify
wss
connections with.
Workhorse periodically rechecks this endpoint. If it receives an error response, or the details of the terminal change, it terminates the websocket session.
Workhorse to the WebSocket server
In GitLab, environments or CI jobs may have a deployment service (like
KubernetesService
) associated with them. This service knows
where the terminals or the service for an environment may be found, and GitLab
returns these details to Workhorse.
These URLs are also WebSocket URLs. GitLab tells Workhorse which sub-protocols to speak over the connection, along with any authentication details required by the remote end.
Before upgrading the browser’s connection to a websocket, Workhorse:
- Opens a HTTP client connection, according to the details given to it by Workhorse.
- Attempts to upgrade that connection to a websocket.
- If it fails, an error response is sent to the browser.
- If it succeeds, the browser is also upgraded.
Workhorse now has two websocket connections, albeit with differing sub-protocols, and then:
- Decodes incoming frames from the browser, re-encodes them to the channel’s sub-protocol, and sends them to the channel.
- Decodes incoming frames from the channel, re-encodes them to the browser’s sub-protocol, and sends them to the browser.
When either connection closes or enters an error state, Workhorse detects the error
and closes the other connection, terminating the channel session. If the browser
is the connection that has disconnected, Workhorse sends an ANSI End of Transmission
control code (the 0x04
byte) to the channel, encoded according to the appropriate
sub-protocol. To avoid being disconnected, Workhorse replies to any websocket ping
frame sent by the channel.
Workhorse only supports the following sub-protocols:
Supporting new deployment services requires new sub-protocols to be supported.
channel.k8s.io
Used by Kubernetes, this sub-protocol defines a multiplexed channel.
Control frames have their usual meanings. TextMessage
frames are
invalid. BinaryMessage
frames represent I/O to a specific file
descriptor.
The first byte of each BinaryMessage
frame represents the file
descriptor (fd
) number, as a uint8
. For example:
-
0x00
corresponds tofd 0
,STDIN
. -
0x01
corresponds tofd 1
,STDOUT
.
The remaining bytes represent arbitrary data. For frames received
from the server, they are bytes that have been received from that
fd
. For frames sent to the server, they are bytes that should be
written to that fd
.
base64.channel.k8s.io
Also used by Kubernetes, this sub-protocol defines a similar multiplexed
channel to channel.k8s.io
. The main differences are:
-
TextMessage
frames are valid, rather thanBinaryMessage
frames. - The first byte of each
TextMessage
frame represents the file descriptor as a numeric UTF-8 character, so the characterU+0030
, or “0”, isfd 0
,STDIN
. - The remaining bytes represent base64-encoded arbitrary data.