0

I've recently changed my openshift default domain myapp.rhcloud.com in www.myapp.com with a custom ssl certificate. The config works perfectly well until the web page ask the server for a websocket connection. I use node with socket.io and websockets enabled

I first tried:

io.connect(www.myapp.com:8443/...)

But this return an error.

So I set back the socket connection url to:

io.connect(myapp.rhcloud.com:8443/...)

But I get this error:

No 'Access-Control-Allow-Origin' header is present on the requested resource. Origin 'https://www.myapp.com' is therefore not allowed access. 

Is there a way to allow websocket connection via a custom domain on Openshift ? Or, do I need to set up cors?

EDIT I left socket.io prefix the websocket url I do not pass the protocol to socket.io

2 Answers 2

1

From my understanding, WebSockets use something like this (wss instead of ws for secure)

wss://www.yourapp.com:8443

Make sure you setup openshift with your domain alias

https://www.openshift.com/kb/kb-e1096-how-to-setup-an-alias-for-your-application

2
  • There was a question about this two weeks ago on here about this. Port 8000 and 8443(??? Can't remember ) are the ones you need to use. Aug 1, 2014 at 13:34
  • Port 8000 is for unsecure websocket port 8443 is for secure.
    – honerlawd
    Aug 1, 2014 at 13:52
0

When I log to https://www.myapp.com:8443/socket.io/1/ in Chrome, I get the error

Identity not verified

which is not the case on https://www.myapp.com... after few tests and searchs I think that this error is due to the websocket preview environnement on openshift. Source (https://www.openshift.com/blogs/paas-websockets):

Update: There is one more known complication. When using our preview-deployment of WebSockets with HTTPS and WSS protocols, you will face self-signed certificate. That is because this environment is only temporary to give you insight into upcoming features. Once we move the new routing layer to standard ports 80 and 443, i.e. we move WebSockets support into production, the certificates used will be signed and valid as they are with current deployment.

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.