@hacksore/peer
v0.7.1
Published
PeerJS server component
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PeerServer: A server for PeerJS
PeerServer helps establishing connections between PeerJS clients. Data is not proxied through the server.
Run your own server on Gitpod!
https://peerjs.com
Usage
Run server
Natively
If you don't want to develop anything, just enter few commands below.
- Install the package globally:
$ npm install peer -g
- Run the server:
$ peerjs --port 9000 --key peerjs --path /myapp Started PeerServer on ::, port: 9000, path: /myapp (v. 0.3.2)
- Check it: http://127.0.0.1:9000/myapp It should returns JSON with name, description and website fields.
Docker
Also, you can use Docker image to run a new container:
$ docker run -p 9000:9000 -d peerjs/peerjs-server
Kubernetes
$ kubectl run peerjs-server --image=peerjs/peerjs-server --port 9000 --expose -- --port 9000 --path /myapp
Create a custom server:
If you have your own server, you can attach PeerServer.
Install the package:
# $ cd your-project-path # with npm $ npm install peer # with yarn $ yarn add peer
Use PeerServer object to create a new server:
const { PeerServer } = require('peer'); const peerServer = PeerServer({ port: 9000, path: '/myapp' });
Check it: http://127.0.0.1:9000/myapp It should returns JSON with name, description and website fields.
Connecting to the server from client PeerJS:
<script>
const peer = new Peer('someid', {
host: 'localhost',
port: 9000,
path: '/myapp'
});
</script>
Config / CLI options
You can provide config object to PeerServer
function or specify options for peerjs
CLI.
| CLI option | JS option | Description | Required | Default |
| -------- | ------- | ------------- | :------: | :---------: |
| --port, -p
| port
| Port to listen (number) | Yes | |
| --key, -k
| key
| Connection key (string). Client must provide it to call API methods | No | "peerjs"
|
| --path
| path
| Path (string). The server responds for requests to the root URL + path. E.g. Set the path
to /myapp
and run server on 9000 port via peerjs --port 9000 --path /myapp
Then open http://127.0.0.1:9000/myapp - you should see a JSON reponse. | No | "/"
|
| --proxied
| proxied
| Set true
if PeerServer stays behind a reverse proxy (boolean) | No | false
|
| --expire_timeout, -t
| expire_timeout
| The amount of time after which a message sent will expire, the sender will then receive a EXPIRE
message (milliseconds). | No | 5000
|
| --alive_timeout
| alive_timeout
| Timeout for broken connection (milliseconds). If the server doesn't receive any data from client (includes pong
messages), the client's connection will be destroyed. | No | 60000
|
| --concurrent_limit, -c
| concurrent_limit
| Maximum number of clients' connections to WebSocket server (number) | No | 5000
|
| --sslkey
| sslkey
| Path to SSL key (string) | No | |
| --sslcert
| sslcert
| Path to SSL certificate (string) | No | |
| --allow_discovery
| allow_discovery
| Allow to use GET /peers
http API method to get an array of ids of all connected clients (boolean) | No | |
| | generateClientId
| A function which generate random client IDs when calling /id
API method (() => string
) | No | uuid/v4
|
Using HTTPS
Simply pass in PEM-encoded certificate and key.
const fs = require('fs');
const { PeerServer } = require('peer');
const peerServer = PeerServer({
port: 9000,
ssl: {
key: fs.readFileSync('/path/to/your/ssl/key/here.key'),
cert: fs.readFileSync('/path/to/your/ssl/certificate/here.crt')
}
});
You can also pass any other SSL options accepted by https.createServer, such as `SNICallback:
const fs = require('fs');
const { PeerServer } = require('peer');
const peerServer = PeerServer({
port: 9000,
ssl: {
SNICallback: (servername, cb) => {
// your code here ....
}
}
});
Running PeerServer behind a reverse proxy
Make sure to set the proxied
option, otherwise IP based limiting will fail.
The option is passed verbatim to the
expressjs trust proxy
setting
if it is truthy.
const { PeerServer } = require('peer');
const peerServer = PeerServer({
port: 9000,
path: '/myapp',
proxied: true
});
Custom client ID generation
By default, PeerServer uses uuid/v4
npm package to generate random client IDs.
You can set generateClientId
option in config to specify a custom function to generate client IDs.
const { PeerServer } = require('peer');
const customGenerationFunction = () => (Math.random().toString(36) + '0000000000000000000').substr(2, 16);
const peerServer = PeerServer({
port: 9000,
path: '/myapp',
generateClientId: customGenerationFunction
});
Open http://127.0.0.1:9000/myapp/peerjs/id to see a new random id.
Combining with existing express app
const express = require('express');
const { ExpressPeerServer } = require('peer');
const app = express();
app.get('/', (req, res, next) => res.send('Hello world!'));
// =======
const server = app.listen(9000);
const peerServer = ExpressPeerServer(server, {
path: '/myapp'
});
app.use('/peerjs', peerServer);
// == OR ==
const http = require('http');
const server = http.createServer(app);
const peerServer = ExpressPeerServer(server, {
debug: true,
path: '/myapp'
});
app.use('/peerjs', peerServer);
server.listen(9000);
// ========
Open the browser and check http://127.0.0.1:9000/peerjs/myapp
Events
The 'connection'
event is emitted when a peer connects to the server.
peerServer.on('connection', (client) => { ... });
The 'disconnect'
event is emitted when a peer disconnects from the server or
when the peer can no longer be reached.
peerServer.on('disconnect', (client) => { ... });
HTTP API
Read /src/api/README.md
Running tests
$ npm test
Docker
We have 'ready to use' images on docker hub: https://hub.docker.com/r/peerjs/peerjs-server
To run the latest image:
$ docker run -p 9000:9000 -d peerjs/peerjs-server
You can build a new image simply by calling:
$ docker build -t myimage https://github.com/peers/peerjs-server.git
To run the image execute this:
$ docker run -p 9000:9000 -d myimage
This will start a peerjs server on port 9000 exposed on port 9000 with key peerjs
on path /myapp
.
Open your browser with http://localhost:9000/myapp It should returns JSON with name, description and website fields. http://localhost:9000/myapp/peerjs/id - should returns a random string (random client id)
Running in Google App Engine
Google App Engine will create an HTTPS certificate for you automatically, making this by far the easiest way to deploy PeerJS in the Google Cloud Platform.
- Create a
package.json
file for GAE to read:
echo "{}" > package.json
npm install express@latest peer@latest
- Create an
app.yaml
file to configure the GAE application.
runtime: nodejs
# Flex environment required for WebSocket support, which is required for PeerJS.
env: flex
# Limit resources to one instance, one CPU, very little memory or disk.
manual_scaling:
instances: 1
resources:
cpu: 1
memory_gb: 0.5
disk_size_gb: 0.5
- Create
server.js
(which node will run by default for thestart
script):
const express = require('express');
const { ExpressPeerServer } = require('peer');
const app = express();
app.enable('trust proxy');
const PORT = process.env.PORT || 9000;
const server = app.listen(PORT, () => {
console.log(`App listening on port ${PORT}`);
console.log('Press Ctrl+C to quit.');
});
const peerServer = ExpressPeerServer(server, {
path: '/'
});
app.use('/', peerServer);
module.exports = app;
- Deploy to an existing GAE project (assuming you are already logged in via
gcloud
), replacingYOUR-PROJECT-ID-HERE
with your particular project ID:
gcloud app deploy --project=YOUR-PROJECT-ID-HERE --promote --quiet app.yaml
Privacy
See PRIVACY.md
Problems?
Discuss PeerJS on our Telegram chat: https://t.me/joinchat/ENhPuhTvhm8WlIxTjQf7Og
Please post any bugs as a Github issue.