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

ddp.js

Package Overview
Dependencies
Maintainers
2
Versions
10
Alerts
File Explorer

Advanced tools

Socket logo

Install Socket

Detect and block malicious and high-risk dependencies

Install

ddp.js

ddp javascript client

  • 2.2.1
  • latest
  • Source
  • npm
  • Socket score

Version published
Weekly downloads
9.2K
decreased by-3.53%
Maintainers
2
Weekly downloads
 
Created
Source

npm version Build Status Coverage Status Dependency Status devDependency Status

ddp.js

A javascript isomorphic/universal ddp client.

Warning

ddp.js@^2.0.0 is only distributed as an npm module instead of an UMD bundle. Also, bower has been removed as a method of distribution. If you need an UMD bundle or bower support, I'm open for suggestions to add back those methods of distribution without polluting this repo.

What is it for?

The purpose of this library is:

  • to set up and maintain a ddp connection with a ddp server, freeing the developer from having to do it on their own
  • to give the developer a clear, consistent API to communicate with the ddp server

Install

To install ddp.js using npm:

npm install ddp.js

or using yarn:

yarn add ddp.js

Example usage

const DDP = require("ddp.js");
const options = {
    endpoint: "ws://localhost:3000/websocket",
    SocketConstructor: WebSocket
};
const ddp = new DDP(options);

ddp.on("connected", () => {
    console.log("Connected");
});

const subId = ddp.sub("mySubscription");
ddp.on("ready", message => {
    if (message.subs.includes(subId)) {
        console.log("mySubscription ready");
    }
});
ddp.on("added", message => {
    console.log(message.collection);
});

const myLoginParams = {
    user: {
        email: "user@example.com"
    },
    password: "hunter2"
};
const methodId = ddp.method("login", [myLoginParams]);
ddp.on("result", message => {
    if (message.id === methodId && !message.error) {
        console.log("Logged in!");
    }
});

Developing

After cloning the repository, install npm dependencies with npm install. Run npm test to run unit tests, or npm run dev to have mocha re-run your tests when source or test files change.

To run e2e tests, first install meteor. Then, start the meteor server with npm run start-meteor. Finally, run npm run e2e-test to run the e2e test suite, or npm run e2e-dev to have mocha re-run the suite when source or test files change.

Public API

new DDP(options)

Creates a new DDP instance. After being constructed, the instance will establish a connection with the DDP server and will try to maintain it open.

Arguments
  • options object required

Available options are:

  • endpoint string required: the location of the websocket server. Its format depends on the type of socket you are using.

  • SocketConstructor function required: the constructor function that will be used to construct the socket. Meteor (currently the only DDP server available) supports websockets and SockJS sockets. So, practically speaking, this means that on the browser you can use either the browser's native WebSocket constructor or the SockJS constructor provided by the SockJS library. On the server you can use whichever library implements the websocket protocol (e.g. faye-websocket).

  • autoConnect boolean optional [default: true]: whether to establish the connection to the server upon instantiation. When false, one can manually establish the connection with the connect method.

  • autoReconnect boolean optional [default: true]: whether to try to reconnect to the server when the socket connection closes, unless the closing was initiated by a call to the disconnect method.

  • reconnectInterval number optional [default: 10000]: the interval in ms between reconnection attempts.

Returns

A new DDP instance, which is also an EventEmitter instance.


DDP.method(name, params)

Calls a remote method.

Arguments
  • name string required: name of the method to call.

  • params array required: array of parameters to pass to the remote method. Pass an empty array if you do not wish to pass any parameters.

Returns

The unique id (string) corresponding to the method call.

Example usage

Server code:

Meteor.methods({
    myMethod (param_0, param_1, param_2) {
        /* ... */
    }
});

Client code:

const methodCallId = ddp.method("myMethod", [param_0, param_1, param_2]);

DDP.sub(name, params)

Subscribes to a server publication.

Arguments
  • name string required: name of the server publication.

  • params array required: array of parameters to pass to the server publish function. Pass an empty array if you do not wish to pass any parameters.

Returns

The unique id (string) corresponding to the subscription call.

Example usage

Server code:

Meteor.publish("myPublication", (param_0, param_1, param_2) {
    /* ... */
});

Client code:

const subscriptionId = ddp.sub("myPublication", [param_0, param_1, param_2]);

DDP.unsub(id)

Unsubscribes to a previously-subscribed server publication.

Arguments
  • id string required: id of the subscription.
Returns

The id corresponding to the subscription call (not of much use, but I return it for consistency).


DDP.connect()

Connects to the ddp server. The method is called automatically by the class constructor if the autoConnect option is set to true (default behaviour). So there generally should be no need for the developer to call the method themselves.

Arguments

None

Returns

None


DDP.disconnect()

Disconnects from the ddp server by closing the WebSocket connection. You can listen on the disconnected event to be notified of the disconnection.

Arguments

None

Returns

None

Public events

Connection events

  • connected: emitted with no arguments when the DDP connection is established.

  • disconnected: emitted with no arguments when the DDP connection drops.

Subscription events

All the following events are emitted with one argument, the parsed DDP message. Further details can be found on the DDP spec page.

  • ready
  • nosub
  • added
  • changed
  • removed

Method events

All the following events are emitted with one argument, the parsed DDP message. Further details can be found on the DDP spec page.

  • result
  • updated

Keywords

FAQs

Package last updated on 26 Oct 2017

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