35

Posting this for anybody else running across the same problem.

I was working on a browser client that used stanza.io to connect to an XMPP server (Prosody, in my case). I was using a wss:// connection by default. At some point during development, my client failed to connect at all - it would immediately disconnect silently, without providing any kind of useful error information.

There were no error logs, no error codes, no confirmation dialogs or bars, no indications of what might be wrong.

3 Answers 3

49

After hours of debugging, I eventually found the problem; as I was messing around with the configuration of my XMPP server, I had re-generated the SSL certificates for the XMPPd. Since I was using self-signed certificates, this would cause an SSL error. Because I had visited that same URI over HTTPS before, I'd already manually approved the old self-signed certificate - but obviously that approval was no longer valid after regenerating the SSL certificate.

The key to the problem is this: If your SSL certificate causes a warning of any sort, wss:// WebSocket connections will immediately fail, and there is no canonical way to detect this.

As stated above, there appears to be no standardized way to even detect that this problem is occurring, let alone solve it. The best solution to this problem that I have been able to find, is as follows:

  1. If the WebSocket disconnects prior to having received a login confirmation (XMPP-specific), try to make a plaintext ws:// (without SSL) connection to the non-SSL port.
  2. If the plaintext connection succeeds, this means that the server is up - thus the problem is with the SSL certificate. (If the plaintext connection also fails, the server is simply unavailable.)
  3. Display an error to the user, indicating that there was an SSL problem, and that they should check the certificate, with instructions on how to manually approve it.
  4. Provide a target="_blank" link to the wss:// URL, but replacing the protocol with https://. This might be Prosody-specific, but by visiting that URL you will see the SSL warning page. Prosody will display a text that starts with "It works!" after approving the certificate - if the server-side is a custom application, you should display a message saying that "the problem has been solved, you can close this tab now".
  5. In the background, in the main application, keep attempting to reconnect over wss:// every few seconds. Once a connection succeeds, this means the user has approved the certificate. Hide/remove the error and continue the normal connection/login process.

It's far from a smooth process, UX-wise, but it's the smoothest approach I've found. It is not possible to iframe the error page (this was one of my first ideas) - Chrome will refuse to load it at all, Firefox will hide the "Add exception" button, and I'd imagine other browsers exhibit similar behaviour.

3
  • i my self followed the same approach but i was looking for solution to this problem.Have you found solution to this problem ??
    – Sahil
    Jul 14, 2015 at 6:16
  • @user3522412 I'm not aware of anything having changed since I posted my answer. It looks like we're still stuck with this... Jul 14, 2015 at 20:09
  • I followed 4. but pasted it directly to address bar, then known that my certificate was unauthorized (despite it's working on another webserver of mine). Thanks for the great tips!!!
    – Hai Nguyen
    Aug 11, 2016 at 8:04
3

Remember that modern browsers do not like self-signed certificates. Therefore, if your secure WebSocket connection dies before ending the handshake, it could mean that the certificate has not been accepted. In order to solve the issue, you can:

  • buy a certificate signed by a Central Authority
  • simply open in a new Tab or Window the link of you WebSocket's URI and tell the browser to trust the connection. Come back to your WebSocket and it should work.
2

This is what I did and it worked:

1 - Generate self signed certificate

2 - Create an https websockets server this way

1
  • make sure to have the -nodes option in openssl req ... -nodes otherwise it will be encrypted and the server can't read the key.pem file Jun 30, 2023 at 1:05

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.