2.0.0 • Published 2 years ago

koa-socket.io v2.0.0

Weekly downloads
2
License
MIT
Repository
github
Last release
2 years ago

koa-socket.io

Attaches socket.io to koa and allows koa-style middleware for sockets

Middleware for Koa2 to get/set session use with custom stores such as Redis or mongodb

Use native ES6(async/await) by Nodejs v7.6, use --harmony option.

Or you can use the old versions:

koa-socket.io now requires node v7.6.0 or higher although koa-socket.io simply attaches to the server instance so will be compatible with a koa v1 powered app.

If you need use koa-socket.io on lower version that requires node v4.0.0 or higher, plase use koa-socket.io v1.0.3

Installation

npm i -S koa-socket.io

Example

There is a simple example/test project in test dir. You can launch it by run: (The example code not in the published module, please fetch it at: koa-socket.io@github)

git clone https://github.com/LnsooXD/koa-socket.io.git koa-socket.io
cd koa-socket.io
export NODE_ENV=development
npm install
npm run example

Some simple example code:

const Koa = require( 'koa' )
const IO = require( 'koa-socket.io' )
const http = require('http');


const app = new Koa()
const io = new IO({
  namespace: '/'
})
  
app.use( ... )

let options = {
  /* socket.io options */
}

var server = http.createServer(app.callback());

io.start( server, options/*, port, host */ )

io.on('join', function* () {
    console.log('join event receiverd, new user: ', this.data)

    // use global io send borad cast
    io.emit('msg', '[All]: ' + this.data + ' joind'); 

    // use current socket send a broadcast
    this.socket.broadcast('msg', '[All]: Hello guys, I\'m ' + this.data + '.'); 
    
     // just send to current user
    this.socket.emit('msg', '[' + this.data + ']' + " Welcome to koa-socket.io !");
})

server.listen( process.env.PORT || 3000 )

Features

  • Attach socket.io to existing koa projects
  • Attach koa-style middleware to socket.io events

Middleware and event handlers

Middleware can be added in much the same way as it can be added to any regular koa instance.

io.use(function* (next){
  let start = new Date()
  yield next;
  console.log( `response time: ${ new Date() - start }ms` )
})

Passed Context

this =  {
  event: listener.event,
  data: data,
  socket: Socket,
  acknowledge: cb
}
io.use( function* (next ) {
  this.process = process.pid
  yield next;
})

io.use( function *(next ) => {
  // ctx is passed along so ctx.process is now available
  console.log( this.process )
})

io.on( 'event', function*(next) => {
  // ctx is passed all the way through to the end point
  console.log( this.process )
})

Namespaces

Namespaces can be defined simply by instantiating a new instance of koaSocket and passing the namespace id in the constructor. All other functionality works the same, it’ll just be constrained to the single namespace.

const app = new Koa()
const chat = new IO({
  namespace: 'chat'
})

chat.start( app.server )

chat.on( 'message', function*(next) {
  console.log( this.data )
  chat.broadcast( 'response', ... )
})

Namespaces also attach themselves to the app instance, throwing an error if the property name already exists.

const app = new Koa()
const chat = new IO({
  namespace: 'chat'
})

chat.start( app.server )

chat.use( ... )
chat.on( ... )
chat.broadcast( ... )

API

.start( http/https server, socket.io options, port, host )

Attaches to a http/https server

io.start( server )
server.listen( process.env.PORT )

.use( Function callback| Async Function callback )

Applies middleware to the stack.

Middleware are executed each time an event is reacted to and before the callback is triggered for an event.

Middleware must be generator

Middleware functions are called with this and next like koa 1.x.

io.use( function* (next ) {
  console.log( 'Upstream' )
  yield next;
  console.log( 'Downstream' )
})

.on( String event, Function callback| Async Function callback )

io.on( 'join', function *( next) => {
  console.log( this.data )
  console.log( this.event)
})

.off( String event, Function callback| Async Function callback )

Removes a callback from an event.

If the event is omitted then it will remove all listeners from the instance.

If the callback is omitted then all callbacks for the supplied event will be removed.

io.off( 'join', onJoin )
io.off( 'join' )
io.off()

.broadcast( String event, data )

Sends a message to all connections.

Author

Contributors

License