This is a fork of version 0.6.3 of the original ShareJS library.
ShareJS is a little server (& client library) to allow concurrent editing of any kind of content. The server runs on NodeJS and the client works in NodeJS or a web browser.
ShareJS currently supports operational transform on plain-text and arbitrary JSON data.
ShareJS should work with all of them
That said, I only test regularly with FF, Safari and Chrome, and occasionally with IE8+. File bug reports if you have issues
Install required packages, and compile the web client code:
npm install
Run the simple example server which includes basic clients with:
./bin/exampleserver
Run a standalone example server by first creating a postgres database, then running the example server itself:
createdb sharejs_example
./bin/sharejs
See bin/options.js
for how to configure the example server.
If you need to re-compile the web client code, just run npm install
again, or alternatively you can use npm run prepublish
.
If you didn't already:
createdb sharejs_example
This project uses a pretty old version of nodeunit, but all tests can easily be run with:
npm run test
There are two ways to run a sharejs server:
-
Embedded in a node.js server app:
var express = require('express'), logger = require('morgan'), sharejs = require('share').server; var app = express(); app.use(logger('dev')); app.use(express.static(__dirname + '/my_html_files')); var options = {db: {type: 'none'}}; // See docs for options. {type: 'pg'} to enable persistance. // Attach the sharejs interfaces to the server server = sharejs.attach(app, options); server.listen(9000); console.log('Server running at http://127.0.0.1:9000/');
The above script will start up a ShareJS server on port 9000 which hosts static content from the
my_html_files
directory. See bin/exampleserver for a more complex configuration example.See the Express documentation for more complex routing.
-
From the command line:
# sharejs
Configuration is pulled from a configuration file that can't be easily edited at the moment. For now, I recommend method #1 above.
-
If you are just mucking around, run:
# sharejs-exampleserver
This will run a simple server on port 8000, and host all the example code there. Run it and check out http://localhost:8000/ . The example server stores everything in ram, so don't get too attached to your data.
If you're running sharejs from source, you can launch the example server by running
bin/exampleserver
.
If you want to get a simple editor working in your webpage with sharejs, here's what you need to do:
First, get an ace editor on your page:
<div id="editor"></div>
Your web app will need access to the following JS files:
- Ace (http://ace.ajax.org/)
- Browserchannel
- ShareJS client and ace bindings.
Add these script tags:
<script src="http://ajaxorg.github.com/ace/build/src/ace.js"></script>
<script src="/channel/bcsocket.js"></script>
<script src="/share/share.js"></script>
<script src="/share/ace.js"></script>
And add this code:
<script>
var editor = ace.edit("editor");
sharejs.open('hello', 'text', function(error, doc) {
doc.attach_ace(editor);
});
</script>
NOTE: If you're using version 0.4 or earler, the argument order is the other way around (
function(doc, error)
).
Thats about it :)
The easiest way to get your code running is to check sharejs out from source and put your html and css files in the examples/
directory. Run bin/exampleserver
to launch the demo server and browse to http://localhost:8000/your-app.html .
See the wiki for documentation.
Its also possible to use sharejs without ace. See the textarea example for details.
The client API is the same whether you're using the web or nodejs.
Here's an example application which opens a document and inserts some text in it. Every time an op is applied to the document, it'll print out the document's version.
Run this from a couple terminal windows when sharejs is running to see it go.
var client = require('share').client;
// Open the 'hello' document, which should have type 'text':
client.open('hello', 'text', 'http://localhost:8000/sjs', function(error, doc) {
// Insert some text at the start of the document (position 0):
doc.insert("Hi there!\n", 0);
// Get the contents of the document for some reason:
console.log(doc.snapshot);
doc.on('change', function(op) {
console.log('Version: ' + doc.version);
});
// Close the doc if you want your node app to exit cleanly
// doc.close();
});
NOTE: If you're using version 0.4 or earler, the argument order is the other way around (
function(doc, error)
).
See the wiki
for API documentation, and examples/node*
for some more example apps.