npm package discovery and stats viewer.

Discover Tips

  • General search

    [free text search, go nuts!]

  • Package details

    pkg:[package-name]

  • User packages

    @[username]

Sponsor

Optimize Toolset

I’ve always been into building performant and accessible sites, but lately I’ve been taking it extremely seriously. So much so that I’ve been building a tool to help me optimize and monitor the sites that I build to make sure that I’m making an attempt to offer the best experience to those who visit them. If you’re into performant, accessible and SEO friendly sites, you might like it too! You can check it out at Optimize Toolset.

About

Hi, 👋, I’m Ryan Hefner  and I built this site for me, and you! The goal of this site was to provide an easy way for me to check the stats on my npm packages, both for prioritizing issues and updates, and to give me a little kick in the pants to keep up on stuff.

As I was building it, I realized that I was actually using the tool to build the tool, and figured I might as well put this out there and hopefully others will find it to be a fast and useful way to search and browse npm packages as I have.

If you’re interested in other things I’m working on, follow me on Twitter or check out the open source projects I’ve been publishing on GitHub.

I am also working on a Twitter bot for this site to tweet the most popular, newest, random packages from npm. Please follow that account now and it will start sending out packages soon–ish.

Open Software & Tools

This site wouldn’t be possible without the immense generosity and tireless efforts from the people who make contributions to the world and share their work via open source initiatives. Thank you 🙏

© 2024 – Pkg Stats / Ryan Hefner

@circuitly/yjs

v13.5.51

Published

Shared Editing Library

Downloads

763

Readme

Yjs

A CRDT framework with a powerful abstraction of shared data

Yjs is a CRDT implementation that exposes its internal data structure as shared types. Shared types are common data types like Map or Array with superpowers: changes are automatically distributed to other peers and merged without merge conflicts.

Yjs is network agnostic (p2p!), supports many existing rich text editors, offline editing, version snapshots, undo/redo and shared cursors. It scales well with an unlimited number of users and is well suited for even large documents.

:construction_worker_woman: If you are looking for professional support, please consider supporting this project via a "support contract" on GitHub Sponsors. I will attend your issues quicker and we can discuss questions and problems in regular video conferences. Otherwise you can find help on our community discussion board.

Sponsorship

Please contribute to the project financially - especially if your company relies on Yjs. Become a Sponsor

Who is using Yjs

  • AFFiNE A local-first, privacy-first, open source knowledge base. 🏅
  • Dynaboard Build web apps collaboratively. :star2:
  • Sana A learning platform with collaborative text editing powered by Yjs.
  • Relm A collaborative gameworld for teamwork and community. :star:
  • Room.sh A meeting application with integrated collaborative drawing, editing, and coding tools. :star:
  • Nimbus Note A note-taking app designed by Nimbus Web. :star:
  • Pluxbox RadioManager A web-based app to collaboratively organize radio broadcasts. :star:
  • Serenity Notes End-to-end encrypted collaborative notes app.
  • PRSM Collaborative mind-mapping and system visualisation. (source)
  • Alldone A next-gen project management and collaboration platform.
  • Living Spec A modern way for product teams to collaborate.
  • Slidebeamer Presentation app.
  • BlockSurvey End-to-end encryption for your forms/surveys.
  • Skiff Private, decentralized workspace.
  • Hyperquery A collaborative data workspace for sharing analyses, documentation, spreadsheets, and dashboards.
  • Nosgestesclimat The french carbon footprint calculator has a group P2P mode based on yjs

Table of Contents

Overview

This repository contains a collection of shared types that can be observed for changes and manipulated concurrently. Network functionality and two-way-bindings are implemented in separate modules.

Bindings

| Name | Cursors | Binding | Demo | |---|:-:|---|---| | ProseMirror                                                   | ✔ | y-prosemirror | demo | | Quill | ✔ | y-quill | demo | | CodeMirror | ✔ | y-codemirror | demo | | Monaco | ✔ | y-monaco | demo | | Slate | ✔ | slate-yjs | demo | | valtio | | valtio-yjs | demo | | immer | | immer-yjs | demo | | React / Vue / Svelte / MobX | | SyncedStore | demo |

Providers

Setting up the communication between clients, managing awareness information, and storing shared data for offline usage is quite a hassle. Providers manage all that for you and are the perfect starting point for your collaborative app.

Getting Started

Install Yjs and a provider with your favorite package manager:

npm i yjs y-websocket

Start the y-websocket server:

PORT=1234 node ./node_modules/y-websocket/bin/server.js

Example: Observe types

const yarray = doc.getArray('my-array')
yarray.observe(event => {
  console.log('yarray was modified')
})
// every time a local or remote client modifies yarray, the observer is called
yarray.insert(0, ['val']) // => "yarray was modified"

Example: Nest types

Remember, shared types are just plain old data types. The only limitation is that a shared type must exist only once in the shared document.

const ymap = doc.getMap('map')
const foodArray = new Y.Array()
foodArray.insert(0, ['apple', 'banana'])
ymap.set('food', foodArray)
ymap.get('food') === foodArray // => true
ymap.set('fruit', foodArray) // => Error! foodArray is already defined

Now you understand how types are defined on a shared document. Next you can jump to the demo repository or continue reading the API docs.

Example: Using and combining providers

Any of the Yjs providers can be combined with each other. So you can sync data over different network technologies.

In most cases you want to use a network provider (like y-websocket or y-webrtc) in combination with a persistence provider (y-indexeddb in the browser). Persistence allows you to load the document faster and to persist data that is created while offline.

For the sake of this demo we combine two different network providers with a persistence provider.

import * as Y from 'yjs'
import { WebrtcProvider } from 'y-webrtc'
import { WebsocketProvider } from 'y-websocket'
import { IndexeddbPersistence } from 'y-indexeddb'

const ydoc = new Y.Doc()

// this allows you to instantly get the (cached) documents data
const indexeddbProvider = new IndexeddbPersistence('count-demo', ydoc)
indexeddbProvider.whenSynced.then(() => {
  console.log('loaded data from indexed db')
})

// Sync clients with the y-webrtc provider.
const webrtcProvider = new WebrtcProvider('count-demo', ydoc)

// Sync clients with the y-websocket provider
const websocketProvider = new WebsocketProvider(
  'wss://demos.yjs.dev', 'count-demo', ydoc
)

// array of numbers which produce a sum
const yarray = ydoc.getArray('count')

// observe changes of the sum
yarray.observe(event => {
  // print updates when the data changes
  console.log('new sum: ' + yarray.toArray().reduce((a,b) => a + b))
})

// add 1 to the sum
yarray.push([1]) // => "new sum: 1"

API

import * as Y from 'yjs'

Shared Types

Y.Doc

const doc = new Y.Doc()

Y.Doc Events

Document Updates

Changes on the shared document are encoded into document updates. Document updates are commutative and idempotent. This means that they can be applied in any order and multiple times.

Example: Listen to update events and apply them on remote client

const doc1 = new Y.Doc()
const doc2 = new Y.Doc()

doc1.on('update', update => {
  Y.applyUpdate(doc2, update)
})

doc2.on('update', update => {
  Y.applyUpdate(doc1, update)
})

// All changes are also applied to the other document
doc1.getArray('myarray').insert(0, ['Hello doc2, you got this?'])
doc2.getArray('myarray').get(0) // => 'Hello doc2, you got this?'

Yjs internally maintains a state vector that denotes the next expected clock from each client. In a different interpretation it holds the number of structs created by each client. When two clients sync, you can either exchange the complete document structure or only the differences by sending the state vector to compute the differences.

Example: Sync two clients by exchanging the complete document structure

const state1 = Y.encodeStateAsUpdate(ydoc1)
const state2 = Y.encodeStateAsUpdate(ydoc2)
Y.applyUpdate(ydoc1, state2)
Y.applyUpdate(ydoc2, state1)

Example: Sync two clients by computing the differences

This example shows how to sync two clients with the minimal amount of exchanged data by computing only the differences using the state vector of the remote client. Syncing clients using the state vector requires another roundtrip, but can save a lot of bandwidth.

const stateVector1 = Y.encodeStateVector(ydoc1)
const stateVector2 = Y.encodeStateVector(ydoc2)
const diff1 = Y.encodeStateAsUpdate(ydoc1, stateVector2)
const diff2 = Y.encodeStateAsUpdate(ydoc2, stateVector1)
Y.applyUpdate(ydoc1, diff2)
Y.applyUpdate(ydoc2, diff1)

Example: Syncing clients without loading the Y.Doc

It is possible to sync clients and compute delta updates without loading the Yjs document to memory. Yjs exposes an API to compute the differences directly on the binary document updates.

// encode the current state as a binary buffer
let currentState1 = Y.encodeStateAsUpdate(ydoc1)
let currentState2 = Y.encodeStateAsUpdate(ydoc2)
// now we can continue syncing clients using state vectors without using the Y.Doc
ydoc1.destroy()
ydoc2.destroy()

const stateVector1 = Y.encodeStateVectorFromUpdate(currentState1)
const stateVector2 = Y.encodeStateVectorFromUpdate(currentState2)
const diff1 = Y.diffUpdate(currentState1, stateVector2)
const diff2 = Y.diffUpdate(currentState2, stateVector1)

// sync clients
currentState1 = Y.mergeUpdates([currentState1, diff2])
currentState1 = Y.mergeUpdates([currentState1, diff1])

Using V2 update format

Yjs implements two update formats. By default you are using the V1 update format. You can opt-in into the V2 update format wich provides much better compression. It is not yet used by all providers. However, you can already use it if you are building your own provider. All below functions are available with the suffix "V2". E.g. Y.applyUpdateY.applyUpdateV2. We also support conversion functions between both formats: Y.convertUpdateFormatV1ToV2 & Y.convertUpdateFormatV2ToV1.

Update API

Relative Positions

When working with collaborative documents, we often need to work with positions. Positions may represent cursor locations, selection ranges, or even assign a comment to a range of text. Normal index-positions (expressed as integers) are not convenient to use because the index-range is invalidated as soon as a remote change manipulates the document. Relative positions give you a powerful API to express positions.

A relative position is fixated to an element in the shared document and is not affected by remote changes. I.e. given the document "a|c", the relative position is attached to c. When a remote user modifies the document by inserting a character before the cursor, the cursor will stay attached to the character c. insert(1, 'x')("a|c") = "ax|c". When the relative position is set to the end of the document, it will stay attached to the end of the document.

Example: Transform to RelativePosition and back

const relPos = Y.createRelativePositionFromTypeIndex(ytext, 2)
const pos = Y.createAbsolutePositionFromRelativePosition(relPos, doc)
pos.type === ytext // => true
pos.index === 2 // => true

Example: Send relative position to remote client (json)

const relPos = Y.createRelativePositionFromTypeIndex(ytext, 2)
const encodedRelPos = JSON.stringify(relPos)
// send encodedRelPos to remote client..
const parsedRelPos = JSON.parse(encodedRelPos)
const pos = Y.createAbsolutePositionFromRelativePosition(parsedRelPos, remoteDoc)
pos.type === remoteytext // => true
pos.index === 2 // => true

Example: Send relative position to remote client (Uint8Array)

const relPos = Y.createRelativePositionFromTypeIndex(ytext, 2)
const encodedRelPos = Y.encodeRelativePosition(relPos)
// send encodedRelPos to remote client..
const parsedRelPos = Y.decodeRelativePosition(encodedRelPos)
const pos = Y.createAbsolutePositionFromRelativePosition(parsedRelPos, remoteDoc)
pos.type === remoteytext // => true
pos.index === 2 // => true

Y.UndoManager

Yjs ships with an Undo/Redo manager for selective undo/redo of changes on a Yjs type. The changes can be optionally scoped to transaction origins.

const ytext = doc.getText('text')
const undoManager = new Y.UndoManager(ytext)

ytext.insert(0, 'abc')
undoManager.undo()
ytext.toString() // => ''
undoManager.redo()
ytext.toString() // => 'abc'

Example: Stop Capturing

UndoManager merges Undo-StackItems if they are created within time-gap smaller than options.captureTimeout. Call um.stopCapturing() so that the next StackItem won't be merged.

// without stopCapturing
ytext.insert(0, 'a')
ytext.insert(1, 'b')
undoManager.undo()
ytext.toString() // => '' (note that 'ab' was removed)
// with stopCapturing
ytext.insert(0, 'a')
undoManager.stopCapturing()
ytext.insert(0, 'b')
undoManager.undo()
ytext.toString() // => 'a' (note that only 'b' was removed)

Example: Specify tracked origins

Every change on the shared document has an origin. If no origin was specified, it defaults to null. By specifying trackedOrigins you can selectively specify which changes should be tracked by UndoManager. The UndoManager instance is always added to trackedOrigins.

class CustomBinding {}

const ytext = doc.getText('text')
const undoManager = new Y.UndoManager(ytext, {
  trackedOrigins: new Set([42, CustomBinding])
})

ytext.insert(0, 'abc')
undoManager.undo()
ytext.toString() // => 'abc' (does not track because origin `null` and not part
                 //           of `trackedTransactionOrigins`)
ytext.delete(0, 3) // revert change

doc.transact(() => {
  ytext.insert(0, 'abc')
}, 42)
undoManager.undo()
ytext.toString() // => '' (tracked because origin is an instance of `trackedTransactionorigins`)

doc.transact(() => {
  ytext.insert(0, 'abc')
}, 41)
undoManager.undo()
ytext.toString() // => '' (not tracked because 41 is not an instance of
                 //        `trackedTransactionorigins`)
ytext.delete(0, 3) // revert change

doc.transact(() => {
  ytext.insert(0, 'abc')
}, new CustomBinding())
undoManager.undo()
ytext.toString() // => '' (tracked because origin is a `CustomBinding` and
                 //        `CustomBinding` is in `trackedTransactionorigins`)

Example: Add additional information to the StackItems

When undoing or redoing a previous action, it is often expected to restore additional meta information like the cursor location or the view on the document. You can assign meta-information to Undo-/Redo-StackItems.

const ytext = doc.getText('text')
const undoManager = new Y.UndoManager(ytext, {
  trackedOrigins: new Set([42, CustomBinding])
})

undoManager.on('stack-item-added', event => {
  // save the current cursor location on the stack-item
  event.stackItem.meta.set('cursor-location', getRelativeCursorLocation())
})

undoManager.on('stack-item-popped', event => {
  // restore the current cursor location on the stack-item
  restoreCursorLocation(event.stackItem.meta.get('cursor-location'))
})

Yjs CRDT Algorithm

Conflict-free replicated data types (CRDT) for collaborative editing are an alternative approach to operational transformation (OT). A very simple differentiation between the two approaches is that OT attempts to transform index positions to ensure convergence (all clients end up with the same content), while CRDTs use mathematical models that usually do not involve index transformations, like linked lists. OT is currently the de-facto standard for shared editing on text. OT approaches that support shared editing without a central source of truth (a central server) require too much bookkeeping to be viable in practice. CRDTs are better suited for distributed systems, provide additional guarantees that the document can be synced with remote clients, and do not require a central source of truth.

Yjs implements a modified version of the algorithm described in this paper. This article explains a simple optimization on the CRDT model and gives more insight about the performance characteristics in Yjs. More information about the specific implementation is available in INTERNALS.md and in this walkthrough of the Yjs codebase.

CRDTs that are suitable for shared text editing suffer from the fact that they only grow in size. There are CRDTs that do not grow in size, but they do not have the characteristics that are benificial for shared text editing (like intention preservation). Yjs implements many improvements to the original algorithm that diminish the trade-off that the document only grows in size. We can't garbage collect deleted structs (tombstones) while ensuring a unique order of the structs. But we can 1. merge preceeding structs into a single struct to reduce the amount of meta information, 2. we can delete content from the struct if it is deleted, and 3. we can garbage collect tombstones if we don't care about the order of the structs anymore (e.g. if the parent was deleted).

Examples:

  1. If a user inserts elements in sequence, the struct will be merged into a single struct. E.g. text.insert(0, 'a'), text.insert(1, 'b'); is first represented as two structs ([{id: {client, clock: 0}, content: 'a'}, {id: {client, clock: 1}, content: 'b'}) and then merged into a single struct: [{id: {client, clock: 0}, content: 'ab'}].
  2. When a struct that contains content (e.g. ItemString) is deleted, the struct will be replaced with an ItemDeleted that does not contain content anymore.
  3. When a type is deleted, all child elements are transformed to GC structs. A GC struct only denotes the existence of a struct and that it is deleted. GC structs can always be merged with other GC structs if the id's are adjacent.

Especially when working on structured content (e.g. shared editing on ProseMirror), these improvements yield very good results when benchmarking random document edits. In practice they show even better results, because users usually edit text in sequence, resulting in structs that can easily be merged. The benchmarks show that even in the worst case scenario that a user edits text from right to left, Yjs achieves good performance even for huge documents.

State Vector

Yjs has the ability to exchange only the differences when syncing two clients. We use lamport timestamps to identify structs and to track in which order a client created them. Each struct has an struct.id = { client: number, clock: number} that uniquely identifies a struct. We define the next expected clock by each client as the state vector. This data structure is similar to the version vectors data structure. But we use state vectors only to describe the state of the local document, so we can compute the missing struct of the remote client. We do not use it to track causality.

License and Author

Yjs and all related projects are MIT licensed.

Yjs is based on my research as a student at the RWTH i5. Now I am working on Yjs in my spare time.

Fund this project by donating on GitHub Sponsors or hiring me as a contractor for your collaborative app.