ReactiveSocket Protocol for Client/Server for JS. Also comes with a CLI.
npm install -g reactivesocket
This library only supports the request/response
, setup
and error
interactions. More interactions are coming soon.
The transport for this library is built entirely on top of the Node.js Stream API. As a result, it is agnostic to the underlying transport mechanism. As long as you pass in a transport stream that is a Node.js Duplex stream, this library will work.
Using streams means that this library natively supports backpressure regardless of the transport implementation.
We currently target TCP via the net module, and WebSockets via the yws-stream module. You are of course, free to inject other transports.
This library supports 3 classes of clients. A fully managed load balancer, which automatically manages a pool of connections and takes care of automatically reconnecting and load-balancing connections from the pool. A fully managed single TCP connection, which can be configured to automatically reconnect if the TCP connection disconnects. Lastly a "raw" ReactiveSocket connection, which doesn't include any retry or transport logic. You provide a transport stream to plug in to the connection. This is the most flexible client, as you can use it with any transport mechanism. Examples for TCP and WebSockets are provided.
var bunyan = require('bunyan');
var reactiveSocket = require('reactivesocket');
var connectionPool = reactiveSocket.createTcpLoadBalancer({
size: 5, // size of the pool, defaults to 5
log: bunyan.createLogger({name: 'rsLoadBalancer'}),
hosts: [{ // array of host:port objects to connect to
host: 'localhost',
port: 1337
},{
host: 'localhost',
port: 1338
},{
host: 'localhost',
port: 1339
},{
host: 'localhost',
port: 1340
},{
host: 'localhost',
port: 1341
},{
host: 'localhost',
port: 1342
},{
host: 'localhost',
port: 1343
}]
});
connectionPool.on('ready', function () {
var stream = connectionPool.getConnection().request({
metadata: 'You reached for the secret too soon, you cried for the moon',
data: 'Shine on you crazy diamond.'
});
stream.on('response', function (res) {
console.log('got response', res.getResponse());
});
stream.on('application-error', function (err) {
console.error('got error', err);
});
stream.on('error', function (err) {
console.error('got rs connection error', err);
});
});
var bunyan = require('bunyan');
var reactiveSocket = require('reactivesocket');
var tcpConnection = reactiveSocket.createTcpConnection({
log: bunyan.createLogger({name: 'rsConnection'}),
connOpts: { // host to connect to
host: 'localhost',
port: 1337
},
reconnect: true // whether to reconnect if the TCP connection dies
});
tcpConnection.on('ready', function () {
var stream = tcpConnection.getConnection().request({
metadata: 'You reached for the secret too soon, you cried for the moon',
data: 'Shine on you crazy diamond.'
});
stream.on('response', function (res) {
console.log('got response', res.getResponse());
});
stream.on('application-error', function (err) {
console.error('got error', err);
});
stream.on('error', function (err) {
console.error('got rs connection error', err);
});
});
var net = require('net');
var bunyan = require('bunyan');
var reactiveSocket = require('reactivesocket');
// Create any transport stream that's a Node.js Duplex Stream.
var transportStream = net.connect(1337, 'localhost', function (err) {
var rsConnection = reactiveSocket.createConnection({
log: bunyan.createLogger({name: 'rsConnection'}),
transport: {
stream: transportStream,
framed: true // TCP requires explicit framing
},
type: 'client',
metadataEncoding: 'utf8',
dataEncoding: 'utf8'
});
rsConnection.on('ready', function () {
// returns a reactive socket stream
var stream = rsConnection.request({
metadata: 'You reached for the secret too soon, you cried for the moon',
data: 'Shine on you crazy diamond.'
});
stream.on('response', function (res) {
console.log('got response', res.getResponse());
});
stream.on('application-error', function (err) {
console.error('got error', err);
});
});
});
var bunyan = require('bunyan');
var reactiveSocket = require('reactivesocket');
var Ws = require('ws');
var WSStream = require('yws-stream');
var websocket = new Ws('ws://localhost:1337');
// Create any transport stream that's a Node.js Duplex Stream
var transportStream = new WSStream({
log: bunyan.createLogger({name: 'ws-stream'}),
ws: websocket
});
// Wait for Websocket to establish connection, before we create an RS Connection
websocket.on('open', function() {
var rsConnection = reactiveSocket.createConnection({
log: bunyan.createLogger({name: 'rsConnection'}),
transport: {
stream: transportStream
},
type: 'client',
metadataEncoding: 'utf8',
dataEncoding: 'utf8'
});
rsConnection.on('ready', function () {
// returns a reactive socket stream
var stream = rsConnection.request({
metadata: 'You reached for the secret too soon, you cried for the moon',
data: 'Shine on you crazy diamond.'
});
stream.on('response', function (res) {
console.log('got response', res.getResponse());
});
stream.on('application-error', function (err) {
console.error('got error', err);
});
});
});
As a convenience for the user, the ReactiveSocket client provide 'timeout' events. Below is an example of how to listen to those events.
var socket = ...;
var client = reactiveSocket.createConnection({
log: LOG,
transport: {
stream: socket,
framed: true
},
requestTimeoutMs: 100,
type: 'client',
metadataEncoding: 'utf-8',
dataEncoding: 'utf-8'
});
client.on('ready', function () {
var responseStream = CLIENT_CON.request({data: 'request-data'});
responseStream.once('response', function (res) {
console.log('Yeah, a response ' + res.getResponse());
});
responseStream.once('timeout', function () {
console.log('Too late ');
});
});
ReactiveSocket client allows you to specify if you want to honor the lease semantic.
reactiveSocket.createConnection({
...,
lease: true,
...
});
If you don't, it means that the ReactiveSocket
is ready as
soon as the connection is established, and you can start sending messages.
But if you do, it means the client has to wait for a LEASE
frame from the
server before sending messages.
Note that nothing is preventing the client to send requests to the server before
receiving the LEASE
, the LEASE
reception only update the return value of
the availability
method (number between 0 and 1.0).
The availability
method gives precious information to a potential higher
level library (e.g. load-balancing library) about the capability of the
underlying connection.
More details about the lease semantic are available in the protocol Spec.
This library comes with a CLI. You can use it by installing this module.
$ npm install -g reactivesocket
There are two versions of the client CLI. The simple CLI makes one request to a server.
$ rs -o req tcp://localhost:1337 'if you didnt care what happened to me, And I didnt care for you'
There is also a benchmarking CLI in the vein of Apache Bench
$ rb -c 10 -n 10000000 -s 1000 tcp://localhost:1337
{ 'elapsed time (s)': 10.529176232,
'total reqs': 137133,
RPS: 13024.095805636622,
'median (ms)': 0.649035,
'mean (ms)': 0.75758988656268,
'0.1% (ms)': 0.457949,
'1% (ms)': 0.498248,
'5% (ms)': 0.544133,
'10% (ms)': 0.565295,
'20% (ms)': 0.596515,
'30% (ms)': 0.616699,
'40% (ms)': 0.633112,
'50% (ms)': 0.649035,
'60% (ms)': 0.671943,
'70% (ms)': 0.708819,
'80% (ms)': 0.772095,
'90% (ms)': 0.905283,
'99% (ms)': 4.441137,
'99.9% (ms)': 6.004325,
'99.99% (ms)': 32.613085,
'99.999% (ms)': 101.189893 }
Simple echo servers are also available for both TCP and Websocket.
$ HOST=localhost PORT=1337 rs-tcp-server
$ HOST=localhost PORT=1337 rs-ws-server
Contributions welcome, please ensure make check
runs clean.
MIT
Copyright 2016 Yunong J Xiao