chat-service

1.0.0 • Public • Published

Chat Service

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Room messaging server implementation that is using a bidirectional RPC protocol to implement chat-like communication. Designed to handle common public network messaging problems like reliable delivery, multiple connections from a single user, real-time permissions and presence. RPC requests processing and a room messages format are customisable via hooks, allowing to implement anything from a chat-rooms server to a collaborative application with a complex conflict resolution. Room messages also can be used to create public APIs or to tunnel M2M communications for IoT devices.

Features

  • Reliable room messaging using a server side history storage and a synchronisation API.

  • Arbitrary messages format via just a validation function (hook), allowing custom/heterogeneous messages formats (including a binary data inside messages).

  • Per-room user presence API with notifications.

  • Realtime room creation and per-room users permissions management APIs. Supports for blacklist or whitelist based access modes and an optional administrators group.

  • Seamless support of multiple users' connections from various devises to any service instance.

  • Written as a stateless microservice, uses Redis (also supports cluster configurations) as a state store, can be horizontally scaled on demand.

  • Extensive customisation support. Custom functionality can be added via hooks before/after for any client request processing. And requests (commands) handlers can be invoked server side via an API.

  • Pluginable networking transport. Client-server communication is done via a bidirectional RPC protocol. Socket.io transport implementation is included.

  • Pluginable state store. Memory and Redis stores are included.

  • Supports lightweight online user to online user messaging.

Table of Contents

Background

Read this article for more background information.

Installation

This project is a node module available via npm. Go check them out if you don't have them locally installed.

$ npm i chat-service

Usage

Quickstart with socket.io

First define a server configuration. On a server-side define a socket connection hook, as the service is relying on an extern auth implementation. An user just needs to pass an auth check, no explicit user adding step is required.

const ChatService = require('chat-service')
 
const port = 8000
 
function onConnect (service, id) {
  // Assuming that auth data is passed in a query string.
  let { query } = service.transport.getHandshakeData(id)
  let { userName } = query
  // Actually check auth data.
  // ...
  // Return a promise that resolves with a login string.
  return Promise.resolve(userName)
}

Creating a server is a simple object instantiation. Note: close method must be called to correctly shutdown a service instance (see Failures recovery).

const chatService = new ChatService({port}, {onConnect})
 
process.on('SIGINT', () => chatService.close().finally(() => process.exit()))

Server is now running on port 8000, using memory state. By default '/chat-service' socket.io namespace is used. Add a room with admin user as the room owner. All rooms must be explicitly created (option to allow rooms creation from a client side is also provided).

// The room configuration and messages will persist if redis state is
// used. addRoom will reject a promise if the room is already created.
chatService.hasRoom('default').then(hasRoom => {
  if (!hasRoom) {
    return chatService.addRoom('default', { owner: 'admin' })
  }
})

On a client just a socket.io-client implementation is required. To send a request (command) use emit method, the result (or an error) will be returned in socket.io ack callback. To listen to server messages use on method.

const io = require('socket.io-client')
 
// Use https or wss in production.
let url = 'ws://localhost:8000/chat-service'
let userName = 'user' // for example and debug
let token = 'token' // auth token
let query = `userName=${userName}&token=${token}`
let opts = { query }
 
// Connect to a server.
let socket = io.connect(url, opts)
 
// Rooms messages handler (own messages are here too).
socket.on('roomMessage', (room, msg) => {
  console.log(`${msg.author}${msg.textMessage}`)
})
 
// Auth success handler.
socket.on('loginConfirmed', userName => {
  // Join room named 'default'.
  socket.emit('roomJoin', 'default', (error, data) => {
    // Check for a command error.
    if (error) { return }
    // Now we will receive 'default' room messages in 'roomMessage' handler.
    // Now we can also send a message to 'default' room:
    socket.emit('roomMessage', 'default', { textMessage: 'Hello!' })
  })
})
 
// Auth error handler.
socket.on('loginRejected', error => {
  console.error(error)
})

It is a runnable code, files are in example directory.

Integrating with other messaging systems

It is possible to use other transports other than socket.io. There is a proof of concept transport, that is using a WebSocket connection with some minimal API abstraction layer ws-messaging and a simple emitter-pubsub-broker as backend messaging fanout abstraction.

Here are the main things that a transport must allow to do:

  • Send messages from a server to groups of clients (based on a single string full match criteria, a.k.a. room messaging).

  • Implement request-reply communication from a client to a server.

  • Implement some kind of persistent connection (or semantically equivalent), it is required for a presence tracking.

Integrating with other databases

Chat Service is using Redis as a shared store with persistence. In a real application some of this information may be needed by other services, but it is not practical to fully reimplement the state store. A better alternative approach is to use hooks. For example, to save all room messages inside an another database just a roomMessageAfter hook can be used. Also ServiceAPI can be exposed via backend messaging buses to other internal servers.

Debugging

Under normal circumstances all errors that are returned to a service user (via request replies, loginConfirmed or loginRejected messages) are instances of ChatServiceError. All other errors indicate a program bug or a failure in a service infrastructure. To enable debug logging of such errors use export NODE_DEBUG=ChatService. The library is using bluebird ^3.0.0 promises implementation, so to enable long stack traces use export BLUEBIRD_DEBUG=1. It is highly recommended to use promise versions of APIs for hooks and ChatServiceError subclasses for returning hooks custom errors.

API

Server side API and RPC documentation is available online.

Concepts overview

User multiple connections

Service completely abstracts a connection concept from a user concept, so a single user can have more than one connection (including connections across different nodes). For user presence the number of joined sockets must be just greater than zero. All APIs designed to work on the user level, handling seamlessly user's multiple connections.

Connections are completely independent, no additional client side support is required. But there are info messages and commands that can be used to get information about other user's connections. It makes possible to realise client-side sync patterns, like keeping all connections to be joined to the same rooms.

Room permissions

Each room has a permissions system. There is a single owner user, that has all administrator privileges and can assign users to the administrators group. Administrators can manage other users' access permissions. Two modes are supported: blacklist and whitelist. After access lists/mode modifications, service automatically removes users that have lost an access permission.

If enableRoomsManagement options is enabled users can create rooms via roomCreate command. The creator of a room will be it's owner and can also delete it via roomDelete command.

Before hooks can be used to implement additional permissions systems.

Reliable messaging and history synchronisation

When a user sends a room message, in RPC reply the message id is returned. It means that the message has been saved in a store (in an append only circular buffer like structure). Room message ids are a sequence starting from 1, that increases by one for each successfully sent message in the room. A client can always check the last room message id via roomHistoryInfo command, and use roomHistoryGet command to get missing messages. Such approach ensures that a message can be received, unless it is deleted due to rotation.

Custom messages format

By default a client can send messages that are limited to just a {textMessage: 'Some string'}. To enable custom messages format provide directMessagesChecker or roomMessagesChecker hooks. When a hook resolves, a message format is accepted. Messages can be arbitrary data with a few restrictions. The top level must be an Object, without timestamp, author or id fields (service will fill this fields before sending messages). The nested levels can include arbitrary data types (even binary), but no nested objects with a field type set to 'Buffer' (used for binary data manipulations).

Integration and customisations

Each user command supports before and after hook adding, and a client connection/disconnection hooks are supported too. Command and hooks are executed sequentially: before hook - command - after hook (it will be called on command errors too). Sequence termination in before hooks is possible. Clients can send additional command arguments, hooks can read them, and reply with additional arguments.

To execute an user command server side execUserCommand is provided. Also there are some more server side only methods provided by ServiceAPI and TransportInterface. Look for some customisation cases in Customisation examples.

Failures recovery

Service keeps user presence and connection data in a store, that may be persistent or shared. So if an instance is shutdown incorrectly (without calling or waiting for close method to finish) or lost completely network connection to a store, presence data will become incorrect. To fix this case instanceRecovery method is provided.

Also there are more subtle cases regarding connection-dependant data consistency. Transport communication instances and store instances can experience various kind of network, software or hardware failures. In some edge cases (like operation on multiple users) such failures can cause inconsistencies (for the most part errors will be returned to the command's issuers). These events are reported via an instance emitter (like storeConsistencyFailure event), and data can be sync via RecoveryAPI methods.

Customisation examples

Anonymous listeners

By default every user is assumed to have an unique login (userName). Instead of managing names generation, an integration with a separate transport can be used (or a multiplexed connection, for example an another socket.io namespace). Room messages can be forwarded from roomMessage after hook to a transport, that is accessible without a login. And vice versa some service commands can be executed by anonymous users via execUserCommand with bypassing permissions option turned on.

Messages aggregation and filtering

A roomMessage after hook can be also used to forward messages from one room to another. So rooms can be used for messages aggregation from another rooms. Since hooks are just functions and have a full access to messages content, it allows to implement arbitrary content-based forwarding rules. Including implementing systems with highly personalised user (client) specific feeds.

Explicit multi-device announcements

By default there is no way for other users to know the number and types of user connections joined to a room. Such information can be passed, for example in a query string and then saved via a connection hook. The announcement can be made in onJoin and onLeave hooks, using directly transport sendToChannel method. Also additional information regarding joined devices types should be sent from roomGetAccessList after hook (when list name is equal to 'userlist').

Messages editing and deletion

There is no delete or edit operation, as they will make inconsistencies inside a room history. A common alternative for deleting and editing is to use room messages with a special meaning that clients will use to hide or alter messages.

Contribute

If you encounter a bug in this package, please submit a bug report to github repo issues.

PRs are also accepted.

License

MIT

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