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

ng2-signalr-patched

v6.1.2

Published

angular2 signalr library patched to provide additional configs to jQuery SignalR

Downloads

5

Readme

npm version live demo Coverage Status Build Status

ng2-signalr

An angular typescript library that allows you to connect to Asp.Net SignalR ** Updated to allow configuration of $.hubConnection **

Features:

  1. 100% typescript
  2. use rxjs to observe server events
  3. write unit tests easy using the provided SignalrConnectionMockManager & ActivatedRouteMock

ng2-signalr live demo

ng2-signalr source: ng2 signalr demo demo : demo (can take longer to load. Sorry, azure free tier :-)) ng cli example: ng cli example

Installation

npm install ng2-signalr jquery signalr --save

v5 is first version developed against angular v5. angular v4 users should use v2.2.1.

Setup

inside app.module.ts

import { SignalRModule } from 'ng2-signalr';
import { SignalRConfiguration } from 'ng2-signalr';

// >= v2.0.0
export function createConfig(): SignalRConfiguration {
  const c = new SignalRConfiguration();
  c.hubName = 'Ng2SignalRHub';
  c.qs = { user: 'donald' };
  c.url = 'http://ng2-signalr-backend.azurewebsites.net/';
  c.logging = true;
  
  // >= v5.0.0
  c.executeEventsInZone = true; // optional, default is true
  c.executeErrorsInZone = false; // optional, default is false
  c.executeStatusChangeInZone = true; // optional, default is true

  // This version
  c.hubOptions = {useDefaultPath: true}; // optional, default is true

  return c;
}


@NgModule({
  imports: [ 
    SignalRModule.forRoot(createConfig)
  ]
})

// v1.0.9
const config = new SignalRConfiguration();
config.hubName = 'Ng2SignalRHub';
config.qs = { user: 'donald' };
config.url = 'http://ng2-signalr-backend.azurewebsites.net/';

@NgModule({
  imports: [ 
    SignalRModule.configure(config)
  ]
})

setup ngcli

inside angular-cli.json

"scripts": [
          "../node_modules/jquery/dist/jquery.min.js",
          "../node_modules/signalr/jquery.signalR.js"
],

Create connection

There exist 2 ways to create a connection:

1. inject connection

This approach is preferable. You can easily rely on the default router navigation events (NavigationStart/End) to keep your user busy while the connection establishment is ongoing. Secondly you can inject the connection directly, facilitating easier unit testing. Setup involves 3 steps.

// 1. if you want your component code to be testable, it is best to use a route resolver and make the connection there
import { Resolve } from '@angular/router';
import { SignalR, SignalRConnection } from 'ng2-signalr';
import { Injectable } from '@angular/core';

@Injectable()
export class ConnectionResolver implements Resolve<SignalRConnection> {

    constructor(private _signalR: SignalR)  { }

    resolve() {
        console.log('ConnectionResolver. Resolving...');
        return this._signalR.connect();
    }
}

// 2. use the resolver to resolve 'connection' when navigation to the your page/component
import { Route } from '@angular/router';
import { DocumentationComponent } from './index';
import { ConnectionResolver } from './documentation.route.resolver';

export const DocumentationRoutes: Route[] = [
	{
		path: 'documentation',
    component: DocumentationComponent,
     resolve: { connection: ConnectionResolver }
	}
];

// 3. then inside your component
 export class ChatComponent {
  private _connection: SignalRConnection;

  constructor(route: ActivatedRoute) {    
  }
  
  ngOnInit() {
      this.connection = this.route.snapshot.data['connection'];
  }
  
}    

2. inject signalr

Creating a client-server connection can be done by calling the connect method on the Signalr instance.

// inside your component.
constructor(private _signalR: SignalR)  {
}

someFunction() {
    this._signalR.connect().then((c) => {
      //do stuff
    });
    
    
    
}

This approach has several drawbacks: WaitTime:

  • Take into account, it can take several second to establish connection with the server and thus for the promise to resolve. This is especially true when a websocket-transport connection is not possible and signalr tries to fallback to other transports like serverSentEevents and long polling. Is it adviceable to keep your end user aware by showing some form of progress.
    More difficult to unit test:
  • If you want to write unit tests against the connection, you need to mock Signalr instance first.

listen to connectionstatus changes during connect (>= v2.0.6)

From version 2.0.6 onwards you can subscribe to connectionstatus changes upon connecting to the server. Forst you ask signalr to create a connection. Then on the connection object you can subscribe to the status observable before calling the start method.

FYI: connect() is now shorthand for createConnection().start(), meaning without subscribing to status changes

let conx = this._signalR.createConnection();
conx.status.subscribe((s) => console.warn(s.name));
conx.start().then((c) => {
...
});

Configuration

You can configure Singalr on 2 different levels:

1. Module level:

The module level, is where you typically provide the default configuration. This is were you pass in the default hubname, serverurl, qs (query string parameters), and transport. When, somewhere in your application, Singalr.connect() method is invoked without parameters, it will use this default configuration.

import { SignalRModule } from 'ng2-signalr';
import { SignalRConfiguration, ConnectionTransport } from 'ng2-signalr';

// <= v1.0.9
const config = new SignalRConfiguration();
config.hubName = 'Ng2SignalRHub';  //default
config.qs = { user: 'donald' };
config.url = 'http://ng2-signalr-backend.azurewebsites.net/';
// Specify one Transport: config.transport = ConnectionTransports.longPolling; or fallback options with order like below. Defaults to best avaliable connection.
config.transport = [ConnectionTransports.webSockets, ConnectionTransports.longPolling];

@NgModule({
  imports: [ 
    SignalRModule.configure(config)
  ]
})
...

Signalr.connect(); //HERE: module level configuration is used when trying to connect

2. Connection level:

You can always configure signalr on a per connection level. For this, you need to invoke Singalr.connect(options) method, passing in an options parameter, of type ConnectionOptions. Behind the scenes, Signalr connect method will merge the provided options parameter, with the default (module) configuration, into a new configuration object, and pass that to signalr backend.

import { SignalRModule } from 'ng2-signalr';
import { IConnectionOptions, SignalR } from 'ng2-signalr';

let options: IConnectionOptions = { hubName: 'MyHub' };
Signalr.connect(options);

How to listen for server side events

// 1.create a listener object
let onMessageSent$ = new BroadcastEventListener<ChatMessage>('ON_MESSAGE_SENT');
 
// 2.register the listener
this.connection.listen(onMessageSent$);
 
// 3.subscribe for incoming messages
onMessageSent$.subscribe((chatMessage: ChatMessage) => {
       this.chatMessages.push(chatMessage);
});

listenFor shorthand:

When using listenFor method, you can skip the first step in the approach above. Here the listen method returns you the BroadvastEventListener, that you can then subscribe to.

let onMessageSent$  = this.connection.listenFor('ON_MESSAGE_SENT');
onMessageSent$.subscribe( ...

listenForRaw:

When using listenForRaw method, you can cast original data form signalr client callback. Here the listen method returns you the any[] of BroadvastEventListener, that you can then subscribe to.

let onMessageSent$  = this.connection.listenForRaw('ON_MESSAGE_SENT');
onMessageSent$.subscribe((data: any[]) => ....);

How to invoke a server method

// invoke a server side method
this.connection.invoke('GetNgBeSpeakers').then((data: string[]) => {
     this.speakers = data;
});

// invoke a server side method, with parameters
this.connection.invoke('ServerMethodName', new Parameters()).then((data: string[]) => {
     this.members = data;
});

How to listen for connection status

this.connection.status.subscribe((status: ConnectionStatus) => {
     this.statuses.push(status);
});

Also supported

// start/stop the connection
this.connection.start();
this.connection.stop();
 
// listen for connection errors
this.connection.errors.subscribe((error: any) => {
     this.errors.push(error);
});

Unit testing

Ng2-signalr comes with a component, specifically built, for making your unit tests easy to write and with few lines of code: SignarlMockManager. The 'SignarlMockManager', can be asked a mocked implementation of your signalr client connection, be using its mock property. The mock connection it's interface is identical to any real signalr connection, that you get back from the Signarl.connect() method. You can use the mock to spy on certain method calls, and verify invocations in your tests. Also, on the mockmanager itself, you will find methods to trigger 'server' like behavior. Both errors$ and status$ properties, can be used for this, and simulate server errors or connectionstatus changes. For more information about, the signarl connection lifecycle, I refer to the official documentation, section Transport disconnection scenarios. Also, the listeners property on the MockManager, holds a collection of all client-server method observers, returned as rxjs subjects. These subject can then be used to simulate a server message being sent over the wire.

 it('I want to simulate an error or status event, in my unit test',
    inject([ChatComponent], (component: ChatComponent) => {

      connectionMockManager.errors$.next('An error occured');  //triggers the connection.error.subscribe(() => {});
      connectionMockManager.status$.next(ConnectionStatuses.slowConnection); //triggers the connection.status.subscribe(() => {});
      ....

}));

it('I want to simulate several ChatMessages received, in my unit test',
    inject([ChatComponent], (component: ChatComponent) => {

      let publisher = connectionMockManager.listeners['OnMessageSent'];

      publisher.next(new ChatMessage('Hannes', 'a message')); //triggers the BroadcastEventListener.subscribe(() => {});
      publisher.next(new ChatMessage('Hannes', 'a second message')); // ''

      expect(component.chatMessages).toEqual([
            new ChatMessage('Hannes', 'a message'),
            new ChatMessage('Hannes', 'a second message')
          ]);
}));

For more info, certainly check out the live demo, unit testing section.

Breaking changes

v2.0.6 going from <2.0.6 to 2.0.6 ConnectionStatus refactoring

  1. removed ConnectionStatus.starting
  2. removed ConnectionStatus.received
  3. removed ConnectionStatus.connectionSlow
  4. removed ConnectionStatus.reconnected
  5. removed ConnectionStatus.stateChanged

v2.0.0 going from 1.0.X to 2.0.0 there will be some breaking changes.

type renames:

  1. ConnectionOptions to IConnectionOptions
  2. ListenerCollection to IListenerCollection
  3. SignalRConnectionBase to ISignalRConnection

configuration: 4. SignalRModule.configure(c: SingalRConfiguration) to SignalR.forRoot(() => SingalRConfiguration);

Detailed webpack install

npm install jquery signalr expose-loader --save

//inside vendor.ts
import 'expose-loader?jQuery!jquery';
import '../node_modules/signalr/jquery.signalR.js';

Detailed systemjs install (starting from v2.0.0)

 {
   'ng2-signalr' : 'node_modules/ng2-signalr/bundles/ng2-singalr.umd.(?min).js'
 }

af93c8777fb64c74f74a875e5da60a168f410e06

Issue Reporting

If you have found a bug or if you have a feature request, please report them at this repository issues section.

Contributing

Pull requests are welcome!

Building

Use tsc to compile and build. A /dist folder is generated.

##TODO: Code coverage

Use npm test cmd to compile and run all tests.

Unit testing

Use npm test cmd to compile and run all tests. Test runner is configured with autowatching and 'progress' as test reporter.