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Vue-Channel

Use Phoenix channels with VueJS

Install

npm install vue-channel --save

Socket Connection

A single connection is established to the server and channels are multiplexed over the connection. Connect to the server using the Socket class: let socket = new Socket("/ws", {params: {userToken: "123"}}) socket.connect() The Socket constructor takes the mount point of the socket, the authentication params, as well as options that can be found in the Socket docs, such as configuring the LongPoll transport, and heartbeat.

Channels

Channels are isolated, concurrent processes on the server that subscribe to topics and broker events between the client and server. To join a channel, you must provide the topic, and channel params for authorization. Here's an example chat room example where "new_msg" events are listened for, messages are pushed to the server, and the channel is joined with ok/error/timeout matches:

    let channel = socket.channel("room:123", {token: roomToken})
    channel.on("new_msg", msg => console.log("Got message", msg) )
    $input.onEnter( e => {
      channel.push("new_msg", {body: e.target.val}, 10000)
       .receive("ok", (msg) => console.log("created message", msg) )
       .receive("error", (reasons) => console.log("create failed", reasons) )
       .receive("timeout", () => console.log("Networking issue...") )
    })
    channel.join()
      .receive("ok", ({messages}) => console.log("catching up", messages) )
      .receive("error", ({reason}) => console.log("failed join", reason) )
      .receive("timeout", () => console.log("Networking issue. Still waiting...") )

Joining

Creating a channel with socket.channel(topic, params), binds the params to channel.params, which are sent up on channel.join(). Subsequent rejoins will send up the modified params for updating authorization params, or passing up last_message_id information. Successful joins receive an "ok" status, while unsuccessful joins receive "error".

Duplicate Join Subscriptions

While the client may join any number of topics on any number of channels, the client may only hold a single subscription for each unique topic at any given time. When attempting to create a duplicate subscription, the server will close the existing channel, log a warning, and spawn a new channel for the topic. The client will have their channel.onClose callbacks fired for the existing channel, and the new channel join will have its receive hooks processed as normal.

Pushing Messages

From the previous example, we can see that pushing messages to the server can be done with channel.push(eventName, payload) and we can optionally receive responses from the push. Additionally, we can use receive("timeout", callback) to abort waiting for our other receive hooks and take action after some period of waiting. The default timeout is 5000ms.

Socket Hooks

Lifecycle events of the multiplexed connection can be hooked into via socket.onError() and socket.onClose() events, ie: socket.onError( () => console.log("there was an error with the connection!") ) socket.onClose( () => console.log("the connection dropped") )

Channel Hooks

For each joined channel, you can bind to onError and onClose events to monitor the channel lifecycle, ie: channel.onError( () => console.log("there was an error!") ) channel.onClose( () => console.log("the channel has gone away gracefully") )

onError hooks

onError hooks are invoked if the socket connection drops, or the channel crashes on the server. In either case, a channel rejoin is attempted automatically in an exponential backoff manner.

onClose hooks

onClose hooks are invoked only in two cases. 1) the channel explicitly closed on the server, or 2). The client explicitly closed, by calling channel.leave()

Presence

The Presence object provides features for syncing presence information from the server with the client and handling presences joining and leaving.

Syncing initial state from the server

Presence.syncState is used to sync the list of presences on the server with the client's state. An optional onJoin and onLeave callback can be provided to react to changes in the client's local presences across disconnects and reconnects with the server. Presence.syncDiff is used to sync a diff of presence join and leave events from the server, as they happen. Like syncState, syncDiff accepts optional onJoin and onLeave callbacks to react to a user joining or leaving from a device.

Listing Presences

Presence.list is used to return a list of presence information based on the local state of metadata. By default, all presence metadata is returned, but a listBy function can be supplied to allow the client to select which metadata to use for a given presence. For example, you may have a user online from different devices with a a metadata status of "online", but they have set themselves to "away" on another device. In this case, they app may choose to use the "away" status for what appears on the UI. The example below defines a listBy function which prioritizes the first metadata which was registered for each user. This could be the first tab they opened, or the first device they came online from:

    let state = {}
    state = Presence.syncState(state, stateFromServer)
    let listBy = (id, {metas: [first, ...rest]}) => {
      first.count = rest.length + 1 count of this user's presences
      first.id = id
      return first
    }
    let onlineUsers = Presence.list(state, listBy)

Usage

Configuration

Automatic socket connection from an URL string

import VueChannel from 'vue-channel';
Vue.use(VueChannel, 'http://phoenixapp.local:4000/socket', {});

Enable Vuex integration

import Vuex from 'vuex'
const store = new Vuex({});
Vue.use(VueChannel, 'http://phoenixapp.local:4000/socket', {}, store);

`

Vuex Store integration

Example store, socket mutations always have "SOCKET_" prefix

import Vue from 'vue'
import Vuex from 'vuex'

Vue.use(Vuex);

export default new Vuex.Store({
    state: {
        connect: false,
        message: null
    },
    mutations:{
        SOCKET_CONNECT: (state,  status ) => {
            state.connect = true;
        },
        SOCKET_USER_MESSAGE: (state,  message) => {
            state.message = message;
        }
    },
    actions: {
        otherAction: ({ commit, dispatch, state }, type) => {
            return true;
        }
    }
})

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Use phoenix channels with VueJS [Work in Progress]

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