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socket.io-redis

Build Status NPM version

How to use

var io = require('socket.io')(3000);
var redis = require('socket.io-redis');
io.adapter(redis({ host: 'localhost', port: 6379 }));

By running socket.io with the socket.io-redis adapter you can run multiple socket.io instances in different processes or servers that can all broadcast and emit events to and from each other.

socket.io-redis use Redis pub/sub mechanism to route events to different nodes/servers and store rooms and sockets ids in Redis sets.

If you need to emit events to socket.io instances from a non-socket.io process, you should use socket.io-emitter.

Stored schema

The module store two different entities in Redis: socket and room.

Each as a Redis SET.

Every key is prefixed with "socket.io". Prefix is customizable with the key option.

socket

The module creates a new Redis SET for each new socket.

The socket SET key is defined as {{PREFIX}}#{{SOCKET_ID}} (e.g.: socket.io#951wMmbBjkREmCapAAAD).

The socket SET is created with one record: the socket ID string.

Then each time this socket join/leave a room module add/remove a Redis record in SET.

Example for a socket with the ID 951wMmbBjkREmCapAAAD in foo and bar rooms:

socket.io#951wMmbBjkREmCapAAAD
  -> 951wMmbBjkREmCapAAAD
  -> foo
  -> bar

room

Each time a room is needed (= a socket join a room that not already exists) the module create a new Redis SET.

The room SET key is defined as {{PREFIX}}#{{ROOM_NAME }} (e.g.: socket.io#foo). The room SET contain the socket IDs of the room sockets.

Then each time a socket join/leave the room the module add/remove the corresponding Redis record from the SET.

Example for a room foo with the following socket in 951wMmbBjkREmCapAAAD, 566Mm_BjkREmRff456:

socket.io#foo
  -> 951wMmbBjkREmCapAAAD
  -> 566Mm_BjkREmRff456

As with native adapter the not longer needed room SET are deleted automatically (except on application exit, see below).

Known limitation

Warning! Current module implementation doesn't cleanup Redis storage on exit.

Consequence is that in a multi-node/server configuration with the out-of-the-box module, shutting down a node process will let sockets and rooms SET remain in Redis even if the current sockets are not longer connected.

The reason is the non ability for node to execute asynchronous tasks (like Redis queries) on exit.

So, every developer should implement his proper cleanup logic in the context of his particular project.

API

adapter(uri[, opts])

uri is a string like localhost:6379 where your redis server is located. For a list of options see below.

adapter(opts)

The following options are allowed:

  • key: the name of the key to pub/sub events on as prefix (socket.io)
  • host: host to connect to redis on (localhost)
  • port: port to connect to redis on (6379)
  • socket: unix domain socket to connect to redis ("/tmp/redis.sock"). Will be used instead of the host and port options if specified.
  • pubClient: optional, the redis client to publish events on
  • subClient: optional, the redis client to subscribe to events on
  • dataClient: optional, the redis client used to store and read socket.io sockets/rooms data

If you decide to supply pubClient, subClient or dataClient make sure you use node_redis as a client or one with an equivalent API.

If you supply clients, make sure you initialized them with the return_buffers option set to true.

License

MIT

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