1.14.0 • Published 8 months ago

@exodus/json-rpc v1.14.0

Weekly downloads
-
License
MIT
Repository
github
Last release
8 months ago

API

const RPC = require('@exodus/json-rpc');
const clientOrServer = new RPC({ transport, requestTimeout, methods });

const result = await clientOrServer.callMethod(
  (methodName: String),
  (parameters: Array)
);
clientOrServer.notify((methodName: String), (parameters: Array)); // same as above but one way only

clientOrServer.exposeMethods({
  methodName: params => result // can return promise
});

// same as exposeMethods but allows to add functions one by one
clientOrServer.exposeFunction('methodName', params => result);

transport is object stream like, anything that implements write() method and on('data', ...) event

Example usage:

const EventEmitter = require('events')
const RPC = require('@exodus/json-rpc')

const transport1 = new EventEmitter()
const transport2 = new EventEmitter()
transport1.write = (data) => {
  console.log('Transport1 write: ', data)
  setTimeout(() => {
    console.log('Emitting data2:', data)
    transport2.emit('data', data)
  }, 500)
}
transport2.write = (data) => {
  console.log('Transport2 write: ', data)
  setTimeout(() => {
    console.log('Emitting data1:', data)
    transport1.emit('data', data)
  }, 500)
}

const server1 = new RPC({ transport: transport1 })
const server2 = new RPC({ transport: transport2 })

server2.exposeMethods({
  testMethod1: (a, b) => {
    console.log('Here!', a, b)
    throw new Error('oops')
    return a + b
  },
  testMethod2: (a, b) => {
    return Promise.resolve(123)
  },
  testMethod3: (a, b) => {
    return
  },
})

server1.exposeMethods({
  foo: () => {
    throw new Error('oops')
  },
})

async function main() {
  const sum = await server1.callMethod('testMethod1', [22, 33])
  console.log(sum)
  await server2.notify('foo')
  await server2.notify('XXX')

  // get the raw response object when making a method call:
  const {
    id,
    jsonrpc,
    error,
    result: sum,
  } = server1.callMethodWithRawResponse('testMethod1', [22, 33])
  console.log(sum)
}

main().catch(console.log)

When the transport emits a message, by default RPC will parse the message with JSON.parse. You can customize this with your own parsing function by specifying the parse constructor option.

const rpc = new RPC({
  transport,
  parse: (jsonString) => {
    // Enforce a maximum message size
    if (jsonString.length > 1000) throw new Error('message is too long')

    // Log messages as they are parsed
    console.log(`New message: ${jsonString}`)

    return JSON.parse(jsonString)
  },
})
1.14.0

8 months ago

1.13.2

9 months ago

1.13.1

9 months ago

1.13.0

9 months ago

1.12.0

11 months ago

1.11.2

1 year ago

1.11.1

2 years ago

1.11.0

3 years ago

1.10.0

3 years ago

1.9.0

3 years ago

1.8.0

3 years ago

1.7.0

3 years ago

1.6.0

5 years ago

1.5.1

5 years ago

1.5.0

5 years ago

1.4.0

5 years ago

1.3.0

6 years ago

1.2.0

6 years ago

1.1.2

6 years ago

1.1.1

6 years ago

1.1.0

6 years ago

1.0.0

6 years ago