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174 lines
7.2 KiB
Ruby
174 lines
7.2 KiB
Ruby
module ActionCable
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module Channel
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# Streams allow channels to route broadcastings to the subscriber. A broadcasting is, as discussed elsewhere, a pubsub queue where any data
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# placed into it is automatically sent to the clients that are connected at that time. It's purely an online queue, though. If you're not
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# streaming a broadcasting at the very moment it sends out an update, you will not get that update, even if you connect after it has been sent.
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#
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# Most commonly, the streamed broadcast is sent straight to the subscriber on the client-side. The channel just acts as a connector between
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# the two parties (the broadcaster and the channel subscriber). Here's an example of a channel that allows subscribers to get all new
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# comments on a given page:
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#
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# class CommentsChannel < ApplicationCable::Channel
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# def follow(data)
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# stream_from "comments_for_#{data['recording_id']}"
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# end
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#
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# def unfollow
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# stop_all_streams
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# end
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# end
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#
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# Based on the above example, the subscribers of this channel will get whatever data is put into the,
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# let's say, <tt>comments_for_45</tt> broadcasting as soon as it's put there.
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#
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# An example broadcasting for this channel looks like so:
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#
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# ActionCable.server.broadcast "comments_for_45", author: 'DHH', content: 'Rails is just swell'
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#
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# If you have a stream that is related to a model, then the broadcasting used can be generated from the model and channel.
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# The following example would subscribe to a broadcasting like <tt>comments:Z2lkOi8vVGVzdEFwcC9Qb3N0LzE</tt>.
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#
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# class CommentsChannel < ApplicationCable::Channel
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# def subscribed
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# post = Post.find(params[:id])
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# stream_for post
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# end
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# end
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#
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# You can then broadcast to this channel using:
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#
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# CommentsChannel.broadcast_to(@post, @comment)
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#
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# If you don't just want to parlay the broadcast unfiltered to the subscriber, you can also supply a callback that lets you alter what is sent out.
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# The below example shows how you can use this to provide performance introspection in the process:
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#
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# class ChatChannel < ApplicationCable::Channel
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# def subscribed
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# @room = Chat::Room[params[:room_number]]
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#
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# stream_for @room, coder: ActiveSupport::JSON do |message|
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# if message['originated_at'].present?
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# elapsed_time = (Time.now.to_f - message['originated_at']).round(2)
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#
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# ActiveSupport::Notifications.instrument :performance, measurement: 'Chat.message_delay', value: elapsed_time, action: :timing
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# logger.info "Message took #{elapsed_time}s to arrive"
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# end
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#
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# transmit message
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# end
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# end
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# end
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#
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# You can stop streaming from all broadcasts by calling #stop_all_streams.
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module Streams
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extend ActiveSupport::Concern
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included do
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on_unsubscribe :stop_all_streams
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end
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# Start streaming from the named <tt>broadcasting</tt> pubsub queue. Optionally, you can pass a <tt>callback</tt> that'll be used
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# instead of the default of just transmitting the updates straight to the subscriber.
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# Pass <tt>coder: ActiveSupport::JSON</tt> to decode messages as JSON before passing to the callback.
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# Defaults to <tt>coder: nil</tt> which does no decoding, passes raw messages.
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def stream_from(broadcasting, callback = nil, coder: nil, &block)
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broadcasting = String(broadcasting)
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# Don't send the confirmation until pubsub#subscribe is successful
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defer_subscription_confirmation!
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# Build a stream handler by wrapping the user-provided callback with
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# a decoder or defaulting to a JSON-decoding retransmitter.
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handler = worker_pool_stream_handler(broadcasting, callback || block, coder: coder)
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streams << [ broadcasting, handler ]
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connection.server.event_loop.post do
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pubsub.subscribe(broadcasting, handler, lambda do
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transmit_subscription_confirmation
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logger.info "#{self.class.name} is streaming from #{broadcasting}"
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end)
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end
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end
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# Start streaming the pubsub queue for the <tt>model</tt> in this channel. Optionally, you can pass a
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# <tt>callback</tt> that'll be used instead of the default of just transmitting the updates straight
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# to the subscriber.
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#
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# Pass <tt>coder: ActiveSupport::JSON</tt> to decode messages as JSON before passing to the callback.
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# Defaults to <tt>coder: nil</tt> which does no decoding, passes raw messages.
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def stream_for(model, callback = nil, coder: nil, &block)
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stream_from(broadcasting_for([ channel_name, model ]), callback || block, coder: coder)
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end
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# Unsubscribes all streams associated with this channel from the pubsub queue.
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def stop_all_streams
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streams.each do |broadcasting, callback|
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pubsub.unsubscribe broadcasting, callback
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logger.info "#{self.class.name} stopped streaming from #{broadcasting}"
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end.clear
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end
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private
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delegate :pubsub, to: :connection
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def streams
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@_streams ||= []
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end
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# Always wrap the outermost handler to invoke the user handler on the
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# worker pool rather than blocking the event loop.
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def worker_pool_stream_handler(broadcasting, user_handler, coder: nil)
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handler = stream_handler(broadcasting, user_handler, coder: coder)
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-> message do
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connection.worker_pool.async_invoke handler, :call, message, connection: connection
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end
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end
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# May be overridden to add instrumentation, logging, specialized error
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# handling, or other forms of handler decoration.
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#
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# TODO: Tests demonstrating this.
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def stream_handler(broadcasting, user_handler, coder: nil)
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if user_handler
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stream_decoder user_handler, coder: coder
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else
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default_stream_handler broadcasting, coder: coder
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end
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end
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# May be overridden to change the default stream handling behavior
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# which decodes JSON and transmits to the client.
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#
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# TODO: Tests demonstrating this.
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#
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# TODO: Room for optimization. Update transmit API to be coder-aware
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# so we can no-op when pubsub and connection are both JSON-encoded.
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# Then we can skip decode+encode if we're just proxying messages.
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def default_stream_handler(broadcasting, coder:)
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coder ||= ActiveSupport::JSON
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stream_transmitter stream_decoder(coder: coder), broadcasting: broadcasting
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end
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def stream_decoder(handler = identity_handler, coder:)
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if coder
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-> message { handler.(coder.decode(message)) }
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else
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handler
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end
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end
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def stream_transmitter(handler = identity_handler, broadcasting:)
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via = "streamed from #{broadcasting}"
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-> (message) do
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transmit handler.(message), via: via
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end
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end
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def identity_handler
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-> message { message }
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end
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end
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end
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end
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