msfs-simconnect-api-wrapper
A JavaScripty wrapper around EvenAR's excellent node-simconnect with a simplified API.
See test.js for the basics, which you can run (with MSFS open and sitting on the apron with a plane =) using npm test
.
Installation and use
Install with npm install msfs-simconnect-api-wrapper
.
For examples on how to use this, see the examples dir.
API
This API manager has an argless constructor that does nothing other than allocate internal values. In order to work with MSFS, you need to call the connect
function first, which can take an options object of the following form:
{
autoReconnect: true or false (will try to reconnect to MSFS if the connection gets closed), defaults to `false`.
retries: positive number or Infinity, defaults to 0.
retryInterval: positive number, representing number of seconds (not milliseconds) between retries, defaults to 2.
onConnect: callback function with the node-simconnect handle as its only argument.
onRetry: callback function with (retries left, retry interval) as its two arguments. This triggers _before_ the next attempt is scheduled.
onException: callback function with (exceptionName) as argument.
host: a domain or IP string (e.g. "localhost" or "127.0.0.1", default: "0.0.0.0").
port: the port at which to contact MSFS (default: 500).
}
For example, we can set up an API object and have it start trying to connect, eventually dropping us into the code that knows it has an MSFS connection using the following boilerplate:
import { MSFS_API } from "./msfs-api.js";
const api = new MSFS_API();
api.connect({
retries: Infinity,
retryInterval: 5,
onConnect: () => run(),
onRetry: (_, interval) => {
console.log(`Connection failed: retrying in ${interval} seconds.`);
},
});
function run() {
console.log(`We have an API connection to MSFS!`);
}
Properties
The API has a single property .connected
which is either undefined
or true
and can be used to determine whether the API has a connection to MSFS outside of code that relies on the onConnect
callback.
Methods
connect(opts?)
Sets up a connection to MSFS, see above for an explanation of opts
. If let unspecified, no retries will be attempted.
on(evtDefinition, handler)
Starts listening for a specific simconnect event with a specific handler. Returns a corresponding arg-less off()
function to clean up the listener. See the "System events" section below for details on the event definition.
System events (used for on/off handling):
All event names in https://docs.flightsimulator.com/html/Programming_Tools/SimConnect/API_Reference/Events_And_Data/SimConnect_SubscribeToSystemEvent.htm are supported as constants on the SystemEvents
object, importable alongside MSFS_API:
import { SystemEvents, MSFS_API } from "./msfs-api.js";
const api = new MSFS_API();
api.connect({
retries: Infinity,
retryInterval: 5,
onConnect: () => {
api.on(SystemEvents.PAUSED, () => {
});
},
});
Note that the event names are keys from the SystemEvents
object, using UPPER_SNAKE_CASE, not strings.
off(evtDefinition, handler)
Stop listening for a specific simconnect event with a specific handler. You'll typically not need to call this function directly, as you can just use the function that on
returns. See the "System events" section above for more details on the event definition.
get(...propNames)
Accepts a list of simvars (with spaces or underscores) and async-returns a key/value pair object with each simvar as key (with spaces replaced by underscores).
schedule(handler, interval, ...propNames)
Sets up a periodic call to handler
every interval
milliseconds with the result of get(...propNames)
. Returns an arg-less off()
to end the scheduled call.
set(propName, value)
Accepts a single simvar and the value its should be set to. This will throw "SimVar ... is not settable" when attempting to set the value for a read-only variable.
trigger(triggerName, value?)
Triggers a simconnect event, with optional value.
Supported Simvars:
All simvars are supported, barring several simvars with data types for which I need to figure out how to actually deference then, such as LatLonAlt structs, or the (super rare) bool/string combination, as well a any simvar that is officially deprecated, or marked as "legacy, do not use these going forward". If you get an error about an unknown Simvar, look up that variable on the SimConnect variables list and see if it's either deprecated, or part of a collection that is considered legacy.
Further more, all environment variables listed over on https://docs.flightsimulator.com/html/Additional_Information/Reverse_Polish_Notation.htm#EnvironmentVariables are supported as well.
(note: "not verified" means that they've been ported, marked settable where appropriate, pass the test run, but they've not been individually confirmed to be correct with respect to the documentation yet).
Supported SimEvents:
SimEvents are resolved by key name, so as long as you use a valid key name, you can trigger it.
See https://docs.flightsimulator.com/html/Programming_Tools/Event_IDs/Event_IDs.htm for the full list (there are... a lot).
Helping out
File an issue if you want to help get this wrapper to 100% simvar and event support!
Even if you just want to help verify a few variables, that's a few variables fewer that I'll need to run through =)