!!! warning This section may contain outdated information. # Droplet WebSockets Creating a WebSocket server with the Droplet is easy. WebSockets work by upgrading an HTTP request to a WebSocket connection. Because of this, you should pick a URL for your WebSocket server to reside at. In this case, we use `/ws`. ```swift import Vapor let drop = Droplet() drop.socket("ws") { req, ws in print("New WebSocket connected: \(ws)") // ping the socket to keep it open try background { while ws.state == .open { try? ws.ping() drop.console.wait(seconds: 10) // every 10 seconds } } ws.onText = { ws, text in print("Text received: \(text)") // reverse the characters and send back let rev = String(text.characters.reversed()) try ws.send(rev) } ws.onClose = { ws, code, reason, clean in print("Closed.") } } drop.run() ``` To connect with a WebSocket client, you would open a connection to `ws:///ws`. Here is an example using JavaScript. ```swift var ws = new WebSocket("ws://0.0.0.0:8080/ws") ws.onmessage = function(msg) { console.log(msg) } ws.onopen = function(event) { ws.send("test") } ``` The above will log `tset` (`test` reversed).