websocket-development▌
mindrally/skills · updated Apr 8, 2026
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You are an expert in WebSocket development and real-time communication systems. Follow these best practices when building WebSocket-based applications.
WebSocket Development
You are an expert in WebSocket development and real-time communication systems. Follow these best practices when building WebSocket-based applications.
Core Principles
- Think through the implementation step-by-step before writing code
- Follow the user's requirements carefully and to the letter
- Prioritize security, scalability, and maintainability throughout
- Leave NO todos, placeholders, or missing pieces in the implementation
Connection Management
Establishing Connections
- Always use the
wss://protocol with SSL/TLS encryption for production environments - This ensures data transmitted over the connection is encrypted and secure from eavesdropping or tampering
- Implement proper handshake validation before accepting connections
- Set appropriate connection timeouts to prevent resource exhaustion
Connection Lifecycle
- Implement heartbeat/ping-pong mechanisms to detect stale connections
- Use reconnection logic with exponential backoff for dropped connections
- Maintain connection state to handle disconnection scenarios gracefully
- Clean up resources properly when connections close
Message Handling
Message Design
- Use structured message formats (JSON with type/payload pattern)
- Include message IDs for request-response correlation
- Implement message versioning for backward compatibility
- Keep message payloads small to reduce latency
Error Handling
- Always include error handling logic for WebSocket connections
- Manage potential disconnections or message failures gracefully
- Implement dead letter handling for unprocessable messages
- Log errors with sufficient context for debugging
Scalability Patterns
Horizontal Scaling
- Use a message broker (Redis Pub/Sub, RabbitMQ) for cross-server communication
- Implement sticky sessions or connection affinity when needed
- Design stateless handlers where possible
- Consider using a dedicated WebSocket gateway service
Performance Optimization
- Buffer messages during brief disconnections
- Implement message batching for high-frequency updates
- Use binary protocols (MessagePack, Protocol Buffers) for bandwidth-sensitive applications
- Monitor connection counts and message throughput
Security Best Practices
Authentication
- Authenticate connections during the handshake phase
- Use token-based authentication (JWT) with proper expiration
- Validate tokens on both connection and periodic intervals
- Implement rate limiting per connection and per user
Authorization
- Validate permissions for each message type/channel
- Implement channel-based access control for pub/sub patterns
- Never trust client-provided data without validation
- Sanitize all incoming message payloads
Framework-Specific Guidelines
Node.js Native WebSocket (v21+)
- Utilize Node.js's built-in WebSocket client for real-time communication to reduce dependencies
- The built-in client simplifies real-time communication and ensures better interoperability
- For servers, use established libraries like
wsor framework-specific solutions
Bun Runtime
- Prefer Bun's native capabilities over third-party alternatives
- Use
Bun.serve()with WebSocket support instead of separate WebSocket libraries - Leverage Bun's built-in stream handling and fetch implementation
Browser Clients
- Implement graceful degradation for older browsers
- Use the standard WebSocket API for broad compatibility
- Handle visibility changes to manage connection state
- Implement offline detection and queuing
Testing Strategies
Unit Testing
- Mock WebSocket connections for isolated testing
- Test message serialization/deserialization independently
- Verify error handling paths
Integration Testing
- Test full connection lifecycle scenarios
- Verify reconnection behavior under various failure modes
- Load test with realistic connection counts and message rates
Monitoring and Observability
- Track connection count metrics
- Monitor message latency and throughput
- Alert on connection error rates
- Log connection lifecycle events for debugging
Common Patterns
Pub/Sub Pattern
- Implement channel subscription management
- Use efficient data structures for subscriber lookup
- Handle subscription cleanup on disconnect
Request/Response Pattern
- Correlate requests and responses with unique IDs
- Implement timeout handling for pending requests
- Consider using acknowledgment messages for reliability
Broadcast Pattern
- Optimize for one-to-many message delivery
- Consider message deduplication strategies
- Implement backpressure for slow consumers
How to use websocket-development on Cursor
AI-first code editor with Composer
Prerequisites
Before installing skills in Cursor, ensure your development environment meets these requirements:
- ›Cursor installed and configured on your development machine
- ›Node.js version 16.0+ with npm package manager (verify with
node --version) - ›Active project directory or workspace where you want to add websocket-development
Execute installation command
Execute the skills CLI command in your project's root directory to begin installation:
The skills CLI fetches websocket-development from GitHub repository mindrally/skills and configures it for Cursor.
Select Cursor when prompted
The CLI will show a list of available agents. Use arrow keys to navigate and space to select Cursor:
Verify installation
Confirm successful installation by checking the skill directory location:
Reload or restart Cursor to activate websocket-development. Access the skill through slash commands (e.g., /websocket-development) or your agent's skill management interface.
Security & Verification Notice
We perform automated surface-level scans (Gen AI Scanner, Socket, Snyk) during installation. These checks detect common vulnerabilities but do not guarantee complete security. Always review skill source code and verify the publisher's reputation before production use.
Skills execute code in your development environment. Always verify the publisher's identity, review recent commits, and test in isolated environments before production deployment.
List & Monetize Your Skill
Submit your Claude Code skill and start earning
Use Cases▌
User Story & Requirements Generation
Create detailed user stories, acceptance criteria, and feature specs
Example
Generate user stories for 'password reset feature' with acceptance criteria, edge cases, and test scenarios
Reduce spec writing time by 50%, ensure comprehensive coverage
Competitive Analysis
Research competitors, compare features, identify gaps
Example
Analyze 5 competitor products, create feature comparison matrix, suggest differentiation opportunities
Complete competitive research in 2 hours instead of 2 days
Roadmap Prioritization
Evaluate features using frameworks (RICE, ICE, Kano) and create prioritized backlogs
Example
Score 20 feature ideas using RICE framework, generate prioritized roadmap with rationale
Make data-driven prioritization decisions faster
Stakeholder Communication
Draft PRDs, status updates, and stakeholder presentations
Example
Create executive summary of Q3 roadmap, monthly progress report, feature launch announcement
Save 3-5 hours/week on communication overhead
Implementation Guide▌
Prerequisites
- ›Claude Desktop or compatible AI client
- ›Access to product documentation and roadmap tools (Jira, Notion, etc.)
- ›Understanding of product management frameworks (RICE, Jobs-to-be-Done, etc.)
- ›Stakeholder contact information and communication channels
Time Estimate
30-60 minutes to see productivity improvements
Installation Steps
- 1.Install product management skill
- 2.Start with user story generation for known feature
- 3.Progress to competitive analysis: research 2-3 competitors
- 4.Use for roadmap prioritization: apply RICE/ICE scoring
- 5.Draft stakeholder communications and refine based on feedback
- 6.Build template library for recurring PM tasks
- 7.Share effective prompts with product team
Common Pitfalls
- ⚠Not validating competitive research—verify facts before sharing
- ⚠Accepting user stories without involving engineering team
- ⚠Over-relying on frameworks without qualitative judgment
- ⚠Not customizing outputs to company culture and communication style
- ⚠Skipping stakeholder validation of generated requirements
Best Practices▌
✓ Do
- +Validate research and competitive analysis with real data
- +Collaborate with engineering when generating technical requirements
- +Customize frameworks and templates to your company context
- +Use skill for first drafts, refine with stakeholder input
- +Document successful prompt patterns for PM tasks
- +Combine AI efficiency with human judgment and intuition
✗ Don't
- −Don't publish competitive analysis without fact-checking
- −Don't finalize user stories without engineering review
- −Don't make prioritization decisions solely on AI scoring
- −Don't skip customer validation of generated requirements
- −Don't ignore company-specific context and culture
💡 Pro Tips
- ★Provide context: company goals, constraints, customer feedback
- ★Ask for alternatives: 'Show 3 ways to prioritize this roadmap'
- ★Request stakeholder-specific formatting: 'Executive summary vs. engineering spec'
- ★Use skill for 70% generation + 30% customization to company needs
When to Use This▌
✓ Use When
Use for user story writing, competitive research, roadmap prioritization, stakeholder communication, and PRD drafting. Best for reducing repetitive documentation and research work.
✗ Avoid When
Avoid for strategic product vision (requires deep customer empathy), pricing decisions (needs market and financial expertise), or when face-to-face customer discovery is more valuable than speed.
Learning Path▌
- 1Basic: user stories, feature specs, status updates
- 2Intermediate: competitive analysis, prioritization frameworks, PRDs
- 3Advanced: product strategy, go-to-market planning, OKR setting
- 4Expert: product vision, market positioning, business model innovation
Discussion
Product Hunt–style comments (not star reviews)- No comments yet — start the thread.
Ratings
4.6★★★★★37 reviews- ★★★★★Amelia Brown· Dec 24, 2024
websocket-development fits our agent workflows well — practical, well scoped, and easy to wire into existing repos.
- ★★★★★Dhruvi Jain· Dec 4, 2024
We added websocket-development from the explainx registry; install was straightforward and the SKILL.md answered most questions upfront.
- ★★★★★Oshnikdeep· Nov 23, 2024
websocket-development fits our agent workflows well — practical, well scoped, and easy to wire into existing repos.
- ★★★★★Ren Huang· Nov 15, 2024
We added websocket-development from the explainx registry; install was straightforward and the SKILL.md answered most questions upfront.
- ★★★★★Ganesh Mohane· Oct 14, 2024
Registry listing for websocket-development matched our evaluation — installs cleanly and behaves as described in the markdown.
- ★★★★★Advait Sethi· Oct 6, 2024
Solid pick for teams standardizing on skills: websocket-development is focused, and the summary matches what you get after install.
- ★★★★★Sakshi Patil· Sep 21, 2024
websocket-development reduced setup friction for our internal harness; good balance of opinion and flexibility.
- ★★★★★Amina Singh· Sep 21, 2024
Useful defaults in websocket-development — fewer surprises than typical one-off scripts, and it plays nicely with `npx skills` flows.
- ★★★★★Sofia Khanna· Sep 13, 2024
websocket-development is among the better-maintained entries we tried; worth keeping pinned for repeat workflows.
- ★★★★★Ren Kim· Sep 5, 2024
We added websocket-development from the explainx registry; install was straightforward and the SKILL.md answered most questions upfront.
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