WebSocket Provider for Yjs
The Websocket Provider implements a classical client server model. Clients connect to a single endpoint over Websocket. The server distributes awareness information and document updates among clients.
This repository contains a simple in-memory backend that can persist to databases, but it can't be scaled easily. The y-redis repository contains an alternative backend that is scalable, provides auth*, and can persist to different backends.
The Websocket Provider is a solid choice if you want a central source that handles authentication and authorization. Websockets also send header information and cookies, so you can use existing authentication mechanisms with this server.
- Supports cross-tab communication. When you open the same document in the same browser, changes on the document are exchanged via cross-tab communication (Broadcast Channel and localStorage as fallback).
- Supports exchange of awareness information (e.g. cursors).
npm i y-websocketThis repository implements a basic server that you can adopt to your specific use-case. (source code)
Start a y-websocket server:
HOST=localhost PORT=1234 npx y-websocketimport * as Y from 'yjs' import { WebsocketProvider } from 'y-websocket' const doc = new Y.Doc() const wsProvider = new WebsocketProvider('ws://localhost:1234', 'my-roomname', doc) wsProvider.on('status', event => { console.log(event.status) // logs "connected" or "disconnected" })The WebSocket provider requires a WebSocket object to create connection to a server. You can polyfill WebSocket support in Node.js using the ws package.
const wsProvider = new WebsocketProvider('ws://localhost:1234', 'my-roomname', doc, { WebSocketPolyfill: require('ws') })import { WebsocketProvider } from 'y-websocket'- Create a new websocket-provider instance. As long as this provider, or the connected ydoc, is not destroyed, the changes will be synced to other clients via the connected server. Optionally, you may specify a configuration object. The following default values of wsOpts can be overwritten.
wsProvider = new WebsocketProvider(serverUrl: string, room: string, ydoc: Y.Doc [, wsOpts: WsOpts]) wsOpts = { // Set this to `false` if you want to connect manually using wsProvider.connect() connect: true, // Specify a query-string / url parameters that will be url-encoded and attached to the `serverUrl` // I.e. params = { auth: "bearer" } will be transformed to "?auth=bearer" params: {}, // Object<string,string> // You may polyill the Websocket object (https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/WebSocket). // E.g. In nodejs, you could specify WebsocketPolyfill = require('ws') WebsocketPolyfill: Websocket, // Specify an existing Awareness instance - see https://github.com/yjs/y-protocols awareness: new awarenessProtocol.Awareness(ydoc), // Specify the maximum amount to wait between reconnects (we use exponential backoff). maxBackoffTime: 2500 }- True if this instance is currently connected to the server.
- True if this instance is currently connecting to the server.
- If false, the client will not try to reconnect.
- True if this instance is currently communicating to other browser-windows via BroadcastChannel.
- True if this instance is currently connected and synced with the server.
- The specified url parameters. This can be safely updated, the new values will be used when a new connction is established. If this contains an auth token, it should be updated regularly.
- Disconnect from the server and don't try to reconnect.
- Establish a websocket connection to the websocket-server. Call this if you recently disconnected or if you set wsOpts.connect = false.
- Destroy this wsProvider instance. Disconnects from the server and removes all event handlers.
- Add an event listener for the sync event that is fired when the client received content from the server.
- Receive updates about the current connection status.
- Fires when the underlying websocket connection is closed. It forwards the websocket event to this event handler.
- Fires when the underlying websocket connection closes with an error. It forwards the websocket event to this event handler.
wsProvider.wsconnected: boolean wsProvider.wsconnecting: boolean wsProvider.shouldConnect: boolean wsProvider.bcconnected: boolean wsProvider.synced: boolean wsProvider.params : boolean wsProvider.disconnect() wsProvider.connect() wsProvider.destroy() wsProvider.on('sync', function(isSynced: boolean)) wsProvider.on('status', function({ status: 'disconnected' | 'connecting' | 'connected' })) wsProvider.on('connection-close', function(WSClosedEvent)) wsProvider.on('connection-error', function(WSErrorEvent)) Start a y-websocket server:
HOST=localhost PORT=1234 npx y-websocketSince npm symlinks the y-websocket executable from your local ./node_modules/.bin folder, you can simply run npx. The PORT environment variable already defaults to 1234, and HOST defaults to localhost.
Persist document updates in a LevelDB database.
See LevelDB Persistence for more info.
HOST=localhost PORT=1234 YPERSISTENCE=./dbDir node ./node_modules/y-websocket/bin/server.jsSend a debounced callback to an HTTP server (POST) on document update. Note that this implementation doesn't implement a retry logic in case the CALLBACK_URL does not work.
Can take the following ENV variables:
CALLBACK_URL: Callback server URLCALLBACK_DEBOUNCE_WAIT: Debounce time between callbacks (in ms). Defaults to 2000 msCALLBACK_DEBOUNCE_MAXWAIT: Maximum time to wait before callback. Defaults to 10 secondsCALLBACK_TIMEOUT: Timeout for the HTTP call. Defaults to 5 secondsCALLBACK_OBJECTS: JSON of shared objects to get data ('{"SHARED_OBJECT_NAME":"SHARED_OBJECT_TYPE}')
CALLBACK_URL=http://localhost:3000/ CALLBACK_OBJECTS='{"prosemirror":"XmlFragment"}' npm startThis sends a debounced callback to localhost:3000 2 seconds after receiving an update (default DEBOUNCE_WAIT) with the data of an XmlFragment named "prosemirror" in the body.
The MIT License © Kevin Jahns