A small component that creates a socket.io connection and exposes it via the components' context to child components.
npm install --save react-socket-context
As you probably already have react
(including react-dom
) and socket.io
in your dependencies, that's all you need. react-socket-context
exposes those as peer dependencies.
react-socket
?react-socket
is great if you just wanna listen to events that are streamed from the server to the client. As your component does never get direct access to the socket itself in your code, you can not easily emit events on the socket to pass messages to the server.
By exposing the socket directly though the context to all child components, you have direct access to it and can emit as well as subscribe to events.
Given this start:
import React from 'react';
import { render } from 'react-dom';
import SocketContext from 'react-socket-context';
import MyComponent from './MyComponent';
render(
<SocketContext>
<MyComponent foo="bar"/>
</SocketContext>
, document.getElementById('app')
);
This will set up a socket to a socket.io
server at the default URL (wherever your app was loaded from), and expose it in the child context for child components for usage. To access it in MyComponent
, do as follows:
import React, { Component, PropTypes } from 'react';
import Moment from 'moment';
export default class MyComponent extends Component {
contextTypes = {
socket: PropTypes.object.isRequired,
}
componentDidMount() {
this.context.socket.on('bootstrap', (data) => this.handleDataBootstrap(data));
this.context.socket.on('event', (data) => this.handleDataIncremental(data));
this.context.socket.emit('bootstrap', { duration: Moment.duration(1, 'h') } );
}
handleDataBootstrap(data) {
// Handle your bootstrap data package to set up the component.
this.setState({foo: data.foo});
}
handleDataIncremental(data) {
// Merge the new event
const newFoo = this.mergeFoo(this.state.foo, data);
this.setState({foo: newFoo});
}
mergeFoo(base, increment) {
// merge data
}
// ...
}
The only offered property as of now is namespace
, which is passed along to the socket.io
constructor:
import React from 'react';
import { render } from 'react-dom';
import SocketContext from 'react-socket-context';
import MyComponent from './MyComponent';
render(
<SocketContext namespace="/news">
<MyComponent foo="bar"/>
</SocketContext>
, document.getElementById('app')
);
Looking at this component, it just accesses the provided socket
via this.context.socket
. For that to work, you need to declare your usage of the socket in contextTypes
.
Once you did that, you should easily be able to work with your socket inside your component, either subscribing to events, or emitting events of your own.