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# Server-Sent Events (SSE)

# Overview

As soon as you deploy an event source, Pipedream creates a private SSE stream linked to that source. Each event emitted by the source is published to this SSE stream, so your app can subscribe to the stream to process new events.

# What is SSE?

Server-sent Events (opens new window) (SSE) defines a spec for how servers can send events directly to clients that subscribe to those events, similar to WebSockets (opens new window) and related server-to-client push technologies.

Unlike WebSockets, SSE enables one-way communication from server to clients (WebSockets enable bidirectional communication between server and client, allowing you to pass messages back and forth). If you only need a client to subscribe to events from a server, and don't require bidirectional communication, SSE is simple way to make that happen.

# Connecting to the SSE stream directly

To process events from your source's SSE stream, you'll need to:

  • Get the SSE URL for your source's events using pd list streams. You'll see your stream's URL under the SSE header.
  • Connect to the SSE stream, passing your Pipedream API key in the Authorization HTTP header using Bearer Auth.

See this repo (opens new window) for an example Node.js app that processes events from a Pipedream SSE stream.

Most programming languages provide SSE clients (opens new window) that facilitate interaction with SSE streams. For example, the Node.js example repo uses the eventsource npm package (opens new window), which implements the EventSource API (opens new window).

# Subscribe to new events using the Pipedream CLI

The pd events command connects to the SSE stream for a source and prints new events as they're emitted:

pd events -f <source-id-or-name>

This is the easiest way to interact with streams, especially if you only need to manually inspect events, or just want to save them to a file on disk.

# :sse-handshake messages

Every 15 seconds, we'll send a message with the :sse-handshake comment to keep open SSE connections alive. These comments should be automatically ignored when you're listening for messages using the EventSource API (opens new window).

We send these because the SSE spec (opens new window) notes that

Legacy proxy servers are known to, in certain cases, drop HTTP connections after a short timeout. To protect against such proxy servers, authors can include a comment line (one starting with a ':' character) every 15 seconds or so.

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