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A service that execute code in any programming language in a sandboxed environment.

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[<>] Falcon - Run code directly from your browser

Falcon is a service that execute code in any programming language in a sandboxed environment.

It uses websockets for bidrectional communication and can support interactive applications with support for keyboard and mouse.

Requirements

Falcon runs on any unix computer and the following software are required.

  • Python 3
  • Docker

The Setup

Step 1: Clone the repository

$ git clone https://github.com/fossunited/falcon

$ cd livecode

Step 2: Install Python dependencies. You may want to do this in a virtualenv.

$ pip install -r requirements.txt -r dev-requirements.txt

Step 3: Build the required docker images

$ make setup

Step 4: Start the falcon server

$ uvicorn livecode_server.server:app
INFO:     Uvicorn running on http://127.0.0.1:8000 (Press CTRL+C to quit)
...

Step 5: visit the webapp at http://127.0.0.1:8000/.

Running Tests

Tests are written using pytest.

To run tests:

$ ./runtests.sh
...
collected 2 items

tests/test_livecode.py ..

Or:

$ ./runtests.sh
...
collected 2 items

tests/test_livecode.py::test_fileformats[sessions/test_hello.yml] PASSED
tests/test_livecode.py::test_fileformats[sessions/test_ping.yml] PASSED

As you notice, the tests are written in YAML files. See tests/ to understand how to write tests.

The Client Library

The falcon also comes with a livecode.js library. It is available at path /static/livecode.js on the livecode server.

LiveCodeSession

Creates a session with the live code server.

var session = LiveCodeSession({
    base_url: "https://livecode.example.com",
    runtime: python,
    code: "print('hello, world!')",
    onMessage: function(msg) {
        console.log(msg);
    }
})

The LiveCodeSession takes options as an object. The following fields are supported:

base_url: Required

The base URL of the livecode server.

runtime:

The runtime to use. Currently only python runtime is supported and that is the default value.

code: Required

The code to execute.

By default, this code is saved as main.py and that is executed.

code_filename:

Filename to use to save the code. The default value depends on the runtime. For python runtime, the default value is main.py.

files:

List of files to to save in the working directory before executing the code. Each file is specified as an object with filename and contents fields.

[
    {filename: "sq.py", contents: "def square(x): return x*x"}
]

command:

Command to execute, specified as a list.

["python", "start.py"]

Typically used along with files to use a different startup script.

env:

Environment variables to set. Specified as an object.

onMessage:

Function to call when a message is received. The function gets the message as argument.

LiveCodeEditor

The LiveCodeEditor provides a high-level editor interface taking care of session creation when run button is clicked and displaying output.

<div class="code-editor" id="editor-1">
    <div>
        <textarea class="code">print("hello, world!")</textarea>
    </div>
    <div>
        <button class="run">Run</button>
    </div>
    <pre class="output">
    </pre>
</div>

<script type="text/javascript>
var e = document.getElementById("editor-1")
var editor = LiveCodeEditor(e, {
    base_url: "https://livecode.example.com",
    runtime: python,
    code: "print('hello, world!')",
    codemirror: true
})
</script>

It looks for elements with the following class names under the specified element.

code

The textarea with the code. This code is executed when the run button/link is clicked.

run

The link or button to attach the run action.

output

The element to write the output.

The LiveCodeEditor supports all options that LiveCodeSession supports and the following:

codemirror

Enables codemirror when this is set to true. The codemirror js and css assets must be included in the document for this to work.

Low-level Interaction

Install wscat:

$ npm install -g wscat

Start interacting with the live code server:

$ wscat --connect http://127.0.0.1:8000/livecode
Connected (press CTRL+C to quit)
< {"msgtype": "welcome", "message": "welcome to livecode"}
> {"msgtype": "ping"}
< {"msgtype": "pong"}
> {"msgtype": "exec", "runtime": "python", "code": "print('hello, world!')"}
> {"msgtype": "write", "file": "stdout", "data": "hello, world!\n"}
> {"msgtype": "quit"}
< {"msgtype": "goodbye"}

The Live Code Protocol

The client and server communicate over websockets using simple JSON messages.

The following types of messages are accepted by the server.

ping

A ping message. The server responds back with a pong message.

Example:

{"msgtype": "ping"}

exec

Request to execute a piece of code. The message will have runtime, files and entrypoint fields.

supported fields:

runtime [required] - execution runtime to use
code [required] - the code to execute
env [optional] - environment variables specified as an object
timeout [optional] - timeout in milliseconds

Example:

{
  "msgtype": "exec",
  "runtime": "python",
  "code": "print('hello, world!')",
  "timeout": 5000
}

quit

Request to quit the connection.

Example:

{"msgtype": "quit"}

event

Notification sent by the client when specific events happen on the server. The server will not consume this message directly, but makes it available for the application to receive it.

supported fields:

event [required] - name of the event. for example: mousemove
data [required] - data about the event. This will be specific to each type of event.

The following types of messages are sent by the server.

pong

Sent as a response to the ping message.

Example:

{"msgtype": "pong"}

goodbye

Sent as a response to the quit message.

Example:

{"msgtype": "goodbye"}

write

Sent when something is printed to stdout or stderr.

Example:

{"msgtype": "write", "file": "stdout", "data": "hello, world!\n"}

As of now, there is no support for printing binary data.

exitstatus

Sent after the execution is complete.

Example:

{"msgtype": "exitstatus", "exitstatus": 0}

error

Sent when a received message can not be processed by the server.

Example:

{"msgtype": "error", "error": "unknown message type: qiut", "msg": {"msgtype
": "qiut"}}

Apart from these messages, the application can send custom messages. For example, a program can send a message to draw on a canvas.

{"msgtype": "draw", "shape": "circle", "args": [100, 100, 50]}

New API

Execute code:

POST /runtimes/python

print("hello, world!")
---
HTTP/1.1 200 OK

hello, world!

Run tests:

$ curl [email protected] -F test_main.py=test_main.py -H 'X-FALCON-MODE: test' http://localhost:8010/runtimes/python

Headers

  • X-FALCON-MODE - exec or test
  • X-FALCON-ARGS - command-line arguments passed
  • X-FALCON-ENV - space separated env variables 'FOO=bar X=1'

LICENSE

This repository has been released under the MIT License.

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