websocketd 0.4.1-1build1 source package in Ubuntu

Changelog

websocketd (0.4.1-1build1) mantic; urgency=medium

  * No-change rebuild with Go 1.21.

 -- Michael Hudson-Doyle <email address hidden>  Thu, 24 Aug 2023 17:19:06 +1200

Upload details

Uploaded by:
Michael Hudson-Doyle
Uploaded to:
Mantic
Original maintainer:
Josue Ortega
Architectures:
any
Section:
misc
Urgency:
Medium Urgency

See full publishing history Publishing

Series Pocket Published Component Section
Noble release universe misc
Mantic release universe misc

Downloads

File Size SHA-256 Checksum
websocketd_0.4.1.orig.tar.gz 45.3 KiB 6b8fe0fad586d794e002340ee597059b2cfc734ba7579933263aef4743138fe5
websocketd_0.4.1-1build1.debian.tar.xz 3.1 KiB 22b30fb84786653c61499f790fe3453d417c6041a1f08b82b0aaf144be561574
websocketd_0.4.1-1build1.dsc 2.0 KiB 19f9d349dbd88a0c8bc7a5e51b77fcda7b2d8273a85c6506a54987d9aef184bc

View changes file

Binary packages built by this source

websocketd: Turn any program that uses STDIN/STDOUT into a WebSocket server

 websocketd is a small command-line tool that will wrap an existing
 command-line interface program, and allow it to be accessed
 via a WebSocket.
 .
 WebSocket-capable applications can now be built very easily. As long as
 you can write an executable program that reads STDIN and writes to STDOUT,
 you can build a WebSocket server. Do it in Python, Ruby, Perl, Bash,
 C, Go, PHP, Java, Clojure, Scala, Groovy, Expect, Awk, VBScript,
 Haskell, Lua, R, whatever! No networking libraries necessary.
 .
 websocketd will start a WebSocket server on a specified port, and listen
 for connections.
 .
 Upon a connection, it will fork the appropriate process, and disconnect
 the process when the WebSocket connection closes (and vice-versa).
 .
 Any message sent from the WebSocket client will be piped to the process's
 STDIN stream, followed by a \n newline.

websocketd-dbgsym: debug symbols for websocketd