You are browsing documentation for an outdated plugin version.
Looking for the plugin's configuration parameters? You can find them in the WebSocket Size Limit configuration reference doc.
Allows operators to specify a maximum size for incoming WebSocket messages.
Separate limits can be applied to clients and upstreams.
When an incoming message exceeds the limit:
- A close frame with status code
1009
is sent to the sender - A close frame with status code
1001
is sent to the peer - Both sides of the connection are closed
Usage
Limits can be applied to client messages, upstream messages, or both.
Limit client messages to 4 KiB
Limit upstream messages to 1 MiB
Limit both client and upstream messages
Raising the default limits
Kong Gateway applies the following default limits to incoming messages for all WebSocket services:
Sender | Default Limit |
---|---|
client |
1048576 (1MiB ) |
upstream |
16777216 (16MiB ) |
This plugin can be used to increase the limit beyond the default. This example increases the client limit to 2 MiB, up from the default of 1 MiB:
The default client limit is smaller than the default upstream limit because proxying client-originated messages is much more computationally expensive than upstream messages. This is due to the client-to-server masking required by the WebSocket specification, so in general it is wise to maintain a lower limit for client messages.
How the plugin works
How limits are applied
Note: Limits are evaluated based on the message payload length and not the entire length of the WebSocket frame (header and payload).
Standalone data frames (text
and binary
)
For limits of 125 bytes or less, the message length is checked after reading and decoding the entire message into memory.
For limits of 125 bytes or more, the message length is checked from the frame header before the entire message is read from the socket buffer, allowing Kong Gateway to close the connection without having to read, and potentially unmask, the entire message into memory.
Continuation data frames
Kong Gateway aggregates continuation
frames, buffering them in-memory before forwarding
them to their final destination. In addition to evaluating limits on an
individual frame basis, like singular text
and binary
frames, Kong Gateway
also tracks the running size of all the frames that are buffered for
aggregation. If an incoming continuation
frame causes the total buffer size to
exceed the limit, the message is rejected, and the connection is closed.
For example, assuming client_max_payload = 1024
:
sequenceDiagram autonumber activate Client activate Kong Client->>Kong: text(fin=false, len=500, msg=[...]) note right of Kong: buffer += 500 (500) Client->>Kong: continue(fin=false, len=500, msg=[...]) note right of Kong: buffer += 500 (1000) Client->>Kong: continue(fin=false, len=500, msg=[...]) note right of Kong: buffer += 500 (1500)
buffer >= 1024 (limit exceeded!) Kong->>Client: close(status=1009, msg="Payload Too Large") deactivate Kong deactivate Client
For control frames
All control frames (ping
, pong
, and close
) have a max payload size of
125
bytes, as per the WebSocket
specification. Kong Gateway
does not enforce any limits on control frames, even when they’re set to a value lower
than 125
.