@fluidframework/counter
Using Fluid Framework libraries
When taking a dependency on a Fluid Framework library, we recommend using a ^
(caret) version range, such as ^1.3.4
.
While Fluid Framework libraries may use different ranges with interdependencies between other Fluid Framework libraries,
library consumers should always prefer ^
.
Introduction
The SharedCounter
distributed data structure (DDS) is used to store an integer counter value that can be modified by multiple clients simultaneously.
The data structure affords incrementing and decrementing the shared value via its increment
method. Decrements are done by providing a negative value.
The SharedCounter
is a specialized Optimistic DDS.
It operates on communicated deltas (amounts by which the shared value should be incremented or decremented), rather than direct changes to the shared value.
In this way, it avoids the pitfalls of DDSes with simpler merge strategies, in which one user's edit may clobber another's (see below).
Note that the SharedCounter
only operates on integer values.
Why a specialized DDS?
You may be asking yourself, why not just store the shared integer value directly in another DDS like a SharedMap?
Why incur the overhead of another runtime type?
The key to the answer here is that DDSes with simpler merge strategies (like SharedMap
) take a somewhat brute-force approach to merging concurrent edits.
For a semantic data type like a counter, this can result in undesirable behavior.
SharedMap Example
Let's illustrate the issue with an example.
Consider a polling widget.
The widget displays a list of options and allows users to click a checkbox to vote for a given option.
Next to each option in the list, a live counter is displayed that shows the number of votes for that item.
Whenever a user checks an option, all users should see the counter corresponding to that option increment by 1.
In this example, the application is storing its vote counts in a SharedMap, where the map keys are strings
representing the IDs of the options, and the values are numbers
representing the associated vote counts.
For simplicity, we will look at a scenario in which 2 users vote for the same option at around the same time.
Specifically, User A clicks the checkbox for option Foo, which currently has 0 votes.
The application then optimistically updates the vote count for that object by writing the updated counter value of 1 for option Foo to its SharedMap
.
The value change operation (op) is then transmitted to the service to be sequenced and eventually sent to other users in the collaborative session.
At around the same time, User B clicks the checkbox for option Foo, which in their view currently has 0 votes.
Similarly to before, the application optimistically updates the associated counter value to 1, and transmits its own update op.
The service receives the op from User A first, and sequences their op updating Foo to 1 as op 0. User B's op is received second, and is sequenced as op 1.
Both users then receive acknowledgement of their update, and receive op 0 and op 1 to be applied in order.
Both clients apply op 0 by setting Foo to 1.
Then both clients apply op 1 by setting Foo to 1.
But this isn't right.
Two different users voted for option Foo, but the counter now displays 1.
SharedCounter
solves this problem by expressing its operations in terms of increments and decrements rather than as direct value updates.
So for the scenario above, if the system was using SharedCounter
s to represent the vote counts, User A would submit an op incrementing Foo by +1, rather than updating the value of Foo from 0 to 1.
At around the same time, User B would submit their own +1 op for Foo.
Assuming the same sequencing, both users first apply op 0 and increment their counter for Foo by +1 (from 0 to 1).
Next, they both apply op 1 and increment their counter for Foo by +1 a second time (from 1 to 2).
Now both users see the right vote count for Foo
!
Usage
The SharedCounter
object provides a simple API surface for managing a shared integer whose value may be incremented and decremented by collaborators.
A new SharedCounter
value will be initialized with its value set to 0
.
If you wish to initialize the counter to a different value, you may modify the value before attaching the container, or before storing it in another shared object like a SharedMap
.
Installation
The package containing the SharedCounter
library is @fluidframework/shared-counter.
To get started, run the following from a terminal in your repository:
npm install @fluidframework/shared-counter
Creation
The workflow for creating a SharedCounter
is effectively the same as many of our other DDSes.
For an example of how to create one, please see our workflow examples for SharedMap creation.
Incrementing / decrementing the value
Once you have created your SharedCounter
, you can change its value using the increment method.
This method accepts a positive or negative integer to be applied to the shared value.
sharedCounter.increment(3);
sharedCounter.increment(-5);
incremented
event
The incremented event is sent when a client in the collaborative session changes the counter value via the increment
method.
Signature:
(event: "incremented", listener: (incrementAmount: number, newValue: number) => void)
By listening to this event, you can receive and apply the changes coming from other collaborators.
Consider the following code example for configuring a Counter widget:
const sharedCounter = container.initialObjects.sharedCounter;
let counterValue = sharedCounter.value;
const incrementButton = document.createElement("button");
button.textContent = "Increment";
const decrementButton = document.createElement("button");
button.textContent = "Decrement";
incrementButton.addEventListener("click", () => sharedCounter.increment(1));
decrementButton.addEventListener("click", () => sharedCounter.increment(-1));
const counterValueLabel = document.createElement("label");
counterValueLabel.textContent = `${counterValue}`;
const updateCounterValueLabel = (delta) => {
counterValue += delta;
counterValueLabel.textContent = `${counterValue}`;
};
sharedCounter.on("incremented", updateCounterValueLabel);
In the code above, whenever a user presses either the Increment or Decrement button, the sharedCounter.increment
is called with +/- 1.
This causes the incremented
event to be sent to all of the clients who have this container open.
Since updateCounterValueLabel
is listening for all incremented
events, the view will always refresh with the appropriate updated value any time a collaborator increments or decrements the counter value.
API Documentation
API documentation for @fluidframework/counter is available at https://fluidframework.com/docs/apis/counter.
Trademark
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Use of Microsoft trademarks or logos in modified versions of this project must not cause confusion or imply Microsoft sponsorship.