import Connection from "./connection" import Subscriptions from "./subscriptions" // The ActionCable.Consumer establishes the connection to a server-side Ruby Connection object. Once established, // the ActionCable.ConnectionMonitor will ensure that its properly maintained through heartbeats and checking for stale updates. // The Consumer instance is also the gateway to establishing subscriptions to desired channels through the #createSubscription // method. // // The following example shows how this can be set up: // // App = {} // App.cable = ActionCable.createConsumer("ws://example.com/accounts/1") // App.appearance = App.cable.subscriptions.create("AppearanceChannel") // // For more details on how you'd configure an actual channel subscription, see ActionCable.Subscription. // // When a consumer is created, it automatically connects with the server. // // To disconnect from the server, call // // App.cable.disconnect() // // and to restart the connection: // // App.cable.connect() // // Any channel subscriptions which existed prior to disconnecting will // automatically resubscribe. export default class Consumer { constructor(url) { this._url = url this.subscriptions = new Subscriptions(this) this.connection = new Connection(this) } get url() { return createWebSocketURL(this._url) } send(data) { return this.connection.send(data) } connect() { return this.connection.open() } disconnect() { return this.connection.close({allowReconnect: false}) } ensureActiveConnection() { if (!this.connection.isActive()) { return this.connection.open() } } } export function createWebSocketURL(url) { if (typeof url === "function") { url = url() } if (url && !/^wss?:/i.test(url)) { const a = document.createElement("a") a.href = url // Fix populating Location properties in IE. Otherwise, protocol will be blank. a.href = a.href a.protocol = a.protocol.replace("http", "ws") return a.href } else { return url } }