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2.1.2 • Public • Published

ngx-socket-io

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Socket.IO module for Angular 7

Install

npm install ngx-socket-io

How to use

Import and configure SocketIoModule

import { SocketIoModule, SocketIoConfig } from 'ngx-socket-io';

const config: SocketIoConfig = { url: 'http://localhost:8988', options: {} };

@NgModule({
  declarations: [
    AppComponent
  ],
  imports: [
    BrowserModule,
    SocketIoModule.forRoot(config)
  ],
  providers: [],
  bootstrap: [AppComponent]
})
export class AppModule { }

We need to configure SocketIoModule module using the object config of type SocketIoConfig, this object accepts two optional properties they are the same used here io(url[, options]).

Now we pass the configuration to the static method forRoot of SocketIoModule

Using your socket Instance

The SocketIoModule provides now a configured Socket service that can be injected anywhere inside the AppModule.

import { Injectable } from '@angular/core';
import { Socket } from 'ngx-socket-io';

@Injectable()
export class ChatService {

    constructor(private socket: Socket) { }

    sendMessage(msg: string){
        this.socket.emit("message", msg);
    }
     getMessage() {
        return this.socket
            .fromEvent("message")
            .map( data => data.msg );
    }
}

Using multiple sockets with different end points

In this case we do not configure the SocketIoModule directly using forRoot. What we have to do is: extend the Socket service, and call super() with the SocketIoConfig object type (passing url & options if any).

import { Injectable, NgModule } from '@angular/core';
import { Socket } from 'ngx-socket-io';

@Injectable()
export class SocketOne extends Socket {

    constructor() {
        super({ url: 'http://url_one:portOne', options: {} });
    }

}

@Injectable()
export class SocketTwo extends Socket {

    constructor() {
        super({ url: 'http://url_two:portTwo', options: {} });
    }

}

@NgModule({
  declarations: [
    //components
  ],
  imports: [
    SocketIoModule,
    //...
  ],
  providers: [SocketOne, SocketTwo],
  bootstrap: [/** AppComponent **/]
})
export class AppModule { }

Now you can inject SocketOne, SocketTwo in any other services and / or components.

API

Most of the functionalities here you are already familiar with.

The only addition is the fromEvent method, which returns an Observable that you can subscribe to.

socket.of(namespace: string)

Takes an namespace. Works the same as in Socket.IO.

socket.on(eventName: string, callback: Function)

Takes an event name and callback. Works the same as in Socket.IO.

socket.removeListener(eventName: string, callback?: Function)

Takes an event name and callback. Works the same as in Socket.IO.

socket.removeAllListeners(eventName?: string)

Takes an event name. Works the same as in Socket.IO.

socket.emit(eventName:string, message?: any, [callback: Function])

Sends a message to the server. Optionally takes a callback. Works the same as in Socket.IO.

socket.fromEvent<T>(eventName: string): Observable<T>

Takes an event name and returns an Observable that you can subscribe to.

socket.fromEventOnce<T>(eventName: string): Promise<T>

Creates a Promise for a one-time event.

You should keep a reference to the Observable subscription and unsubscribe when you're done with it. This prevents memory leaks as the event listener attached will be removed (using socket.removeListener) ONLY and when/if you unsubscribe.

If you have multiple subscriptions to an Observable only the last unsubscription will remove the listener.

LICENSE

MIT

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