Huge News!Announcing our $40M Series B led by Abstract Ventures.Learn More
Socket
Sign inDemoInstall
Socket

@dxos/broadcast

Package Overview
Dependencies
Maintainers
13
Versions
735
Alerts
File Explorer

Advanced tools

Socket logo

Install Socket

Detect and block malicious and high-risk dependencies

Install

@dxos/broadcast

Abstract module to send broadcast messages.

  • 0.1.8
  • Source
  • npm
  • Socket score

Version published
Weekly downloads
106
increased by135.56%
Maintainers
13
Weekly downloads
 
Created
Source

Broadcast

Abstract module to send broadcast messages.

Allows a node to originate a message that will be received at least once, within a reasonably short time, on all nodes that are reachable from the origin node. Messages are propagated via the middleware specified. Broadcast storms are avoided by means of a flooding routing scheme.

Broadcast messages follows the schema:

message Packet {
  bytes seqno = 1;
  bytes origin = 2;
  bytes from = 3;
  bytes data = 4;
}
  • seqno: By default is a random 32-bit but could be used to provide an alternative sorted sequence number.
  • origin: Represents the author's ID of the message. To identify a message (msgId) in the network you should check for the: seqno + origin.
  • from: Represents the current sender's ID of the message.
  • data: Represents an opaque blob of data, it can contain any data that the publisher wants it to defined by higher layers (e.g. a presence information message).

Nodes send any message originating locally to all current peers. Upon receiving a message, a node delivers it locally to any listeners, and forward the message on to its current peers, excluding the peer from which it was received.

Nodes maintain a record of the messages they have received and originated recently, by msgId(seqno + from). This is used to avoid sending the same message to the same peer more than once. These records expire after some time to limit memory consumption by: maxAge and maxSize.

graph

Install

$ npm install @dxos/broadcast

Usage

import { Broadcast } from '@dxos/broadcast';

const middleware = {
  subscribe: (onData, updatePeers) => {
    // Defines how to process incoming data and peers update.

    // on('peers', onPeers)
    // on('data', onData)
    return () => {
      // Return a dispose function.
    }
  },
  send: async (packet, node) => {
    // Define how to send your packets.
    // "packet" is the encoded message to send.
    // "node" is the peer object generate from the lookup.
  }
};

const broadcast = new Broadcast(middleware, {
  id: crypto.randomBytes(32),
  maxAge: 15 * 1000, // Timeout for each message in the LRU cache.
  maxSize: 1000 // Limit of messages in the LRU cache.
})

// We initialize the middleware and subscription inside the broadcast.
await broadcast.open()

broadcast.publish(Buffer.from('Hello everyone'))

await broadcast.close()

You can check a real example in: example

API

const broadcast = new Broadcast(middleware, [options])
  • middleware: The middleware defines an interface to connect the broadcast to any request/response solution.

    • subscribe: ({ onData, onPeers }) => unsubscribeFunction: Defines how to subscribe to incoming packets and peers update.
      • onData: (data: Buffer) => (Packet|undefined): Callback to process incoming data. It returns true if the broadcast could decode the message or false if not.
      • onPeers: (peers: [Peer]): Callback to update the internal list of peers. A Peer object must follow the spec: { id: Buffer, ...props }
      • unsubscribeFunction: Function: Defines a way to unsubscribe from listening messages if the broadcast stop working. Helpful if you are working with streams and event emitters.
    • send: (packet: Buffer, peer: Object) => Promise: Defines how to send the packet builded by the broadcast.
  • options

    • id: Buffer: Defines an id for the current peer. Default: crypto.randomBytes(32).
    • maxAge: number: Defines the max live time for the cache messages. Default: 10 * 1000.
    • maxSize: number: Defines the max size for the cache messages. Default: 1000.
broadcast.open() => Promise

Initialize the cache and runs the defined subscription.

broadcast.close() => Promise

Clear the cache and unsubscribe from incoming messages.

broadcast.publish(data, [options]) -> Promise<Packet>

Broadcast a flooding message to the peers neighboors.

  • data: Buffer: Any data that you want to broadcast.

  • options

    • seqno: Buffer: Defines a custom seqno for the message. Default: crypto.randomBytes(32).
  • Packet

    • seqno: Buffer
    • origin: Buffer
    • from: Buffer
    • data: Buffer

FAQs

Package last updated on 18 Nov 2022

Did you know?

Socket

Socket for GitHub automatically highlights issues in each pull request and monitors the health of all your open source dependencies. Discover the contents of your packages and block harmful activity before you install or update your dependencies.

Install

Related posts

SocketSocket SOC 2 Logo

Product

  • Package Alerts
  • Integrations
  • Docs
  • Pricing
  • FAQ
  • Roadmap
  • Changelog

Packages

npm

Stay in touch

Get open source security insights delivered straight into your inbox.


  • Terms
  • Privacy
  • Security

Made with ⚡️ by Socket Inc