0.3.5 • Published 12 years ago

wesley v0.3.5

Weekly downloads
48
License
-
Repository
github
Last release
12 years ago

Wesley

Version: 0.1.0 Master build: Master branch build status

Wesley? What the frig?

Wesley is a protocol compliant web socket server with some awesome extras.

$ npm install wesley

Usage

var server = require('wesley').listen(1234);

server.on('connection', function (client) {

    // Relay a message to all clients on the server
    client.on('message', function (message) {
        server.send(message);
    });

});

Pooling

Sometimes it's necessary to maintain logical pools of clients (AKA namespaces, rooms, topics, etc).

var server = require('wesley').listen(1234);

server.on('connection', function (client, pool) {

    // Relay a message to the current pool of clients
    client.on('message', function (message) {
        pool.send(message);
    });

});

Pooling is done when the client connects to a route on the host.

ws://localhost:1234/            # Server and / events
ws://localhost:1234/pool        # Server and /pool events
ws://localhost:1234/pool/child  # Server and /pool/child events

You can also handle events differently depending on the pool.

var server = require('wesley').listen(1234);

server.on('connection', function (client, pool) {

    if ('/' !== pool.path) {
        return client.send('Pooling is not enabled on this server.');
    }

    // handle the client

});

Routing

Routing is a way to take a message sent from the client and emit your desired event. This way you can replace the default emitting of message with your own.

var router = function(message, callback) {
    callback('echo', message);
};
var server = require('wesley').listen(1234).router(router);

server.on('connection', function (client) {

    client.on('echo', function(message) {
        // handle the message
    });

});

Using routing, you can also handle more complicated messages than simple strings.

var router = function(json, callback) {
    var data = JSON.parse(json);
    callback(data.type, data);
};
var server = require('wesley')
    .listen(1234)
    .router(router);

server.on('connection', function (client) {

    client.on('message', function(data) {
        // handle the data
    });

});

Rendering

You can only send string data to clients, so by using rendering you can format your data just before it's sent.

var renderer = function(type, message, callback) {
    var packed = JSON.stringify{type:type, body:message};
    callback(packed);
};
var server = require('wesley')
    .listen(1234)
    .renderer(renderer);

server.on('connection', function (client) {

    client.send('message', 'Derp.');

});

Command line interface

I can tell you're super excited to start working on your web socket server. One thing you may find useful is a client to start interacting with. This command line client will hopefully give you what you need to get started.

$ wesley --help

  Usage: wesley [options]

  Options:

    -h, --help                output usage information
    -V, --version             output the version number
    -u, --uri <string>        host address
    -p, --protocol <integer>  web socket protocol

  Default:

    wesley --uri ws://localhost:3000 --protocol 13

Contributing

I accept contributions to the source via Pull Request, but passing unit tests must be included before it will be considered for merge.

$ make install
$ make tests

If you have Vagrant installed, you can build our dev environment to assist development. The repository will be mounted in /srv.

$ vagrant up
$ vagrant ssh
$ cd /srv

License

The content of this library is released under the MIT License by Andrew Lawson. You can find a copy of this license at http://www.opensource.org/licenses/mit

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