An Angular (Angular2, Angular4, Angular5, Angular6 ...) style wrapper for @stomp/stompjs.
While we tried really hard to support multiple Angular versions with same release - actually succeeded for Anguar 2/4/5, it is not possible for Angular 6. This library makes quite extensive use of rxjs which has undergone breaking changes in Angular 6.
Going forward following numbering scheme will be followed:
master
branch, will only support Angular 6 - use dependency like "^6.0.0" angular4
branch, will support Angular 2/4/5 - use dependency like "^4.0.0"For the time being both versions will be maintained. From October 2018, only critical updates will be applied to 4.x.x releases.
As of now both versions offer exactly same APIs.
Recently documentation has been switched to Compodoc from TypeDoc. Please raise an issue if you find broken links or inconsistency in documentation.
Please head to https://stomp-js.github.io/ng2-stompjs/
Changelog at https://stomp-js.github.io/ng2-stompjs/changelog.html
Tested with Angular CLI generated Angular2 (2.4.0), Angular4 (4.0.0), Angular (5.0.0). It has been reported to work with ionic projects as well.
To install this library, run:
$ npm install @stomp/ng2-stompjs --save
or, if using yarn:
$ yarn add @stomp/ng2-stompjs
This will additionally install @stomp/stompjs from https://github.com/stomp-js/stomp-websocket
You must read https://stomp-js.github.io/ng2-stompjs/additional-documentation/sock-js.html
const stompConfig: StompConfig = {
// Which server?
url: 'ws://127.0.0.1:15674/ws',
// Headers
// Typical keys: login, passcode, host
headers: {
login: 'guest',
passcode: 'guest'
},
// How often to heartbeat?
// Interval in milliseconds, set to 0 to disable
heartbeat_in: 0, // Typical value 0 - disabled
heartbeat_out: 20000, // Typical value 20000 - every 20 seconds
// Wait in milliseconds before attempting auto reconnect
// Set to 0 to disable
// Typical value 5000 (5 seconds)
reconnect_delay: 5000,
// Will log diagnostics on console
debug: true
};
const
, code sample to
provide StompService
and StompConfig
will look like: providers: [
StompService,
{
provide: StompConfig,
useValue: stompConfig
}
]
In your constructor (typically of a component or a service), inject
StompService
as a dependency:
constructor(private _stompService: StompService) { }
The queue name structure and semantics vary based on your specific STOMP Broker, see: https://www.rabbitmq.com/stomp.html for RabbitMQ specific details.
Call subscribe(queueName: string, headers: StompHeaders = {})
with name of the queue which returns an Observable (details at:
https://stomp-js.github.io/ng2-stompjs/injectables/StompRService.html#subscribe). Any
of Observable specific operators (map, filter, subscribe, etc.) can be
applied on it. This can also be set into a template with async
pipe.
Example:
let stomp_subscription = this._stompService.subscribe('/topic/ng-demo-sub');
stomp_subscription.map((message: Message) => {
return message.body;
}).subscribe((msg_body: string) => {
console.log(`Received: ${msg_body}`);
});
The Message
class comes from @stomp/stompjs
. So, you will need the
following import in the classes where you consume messages:
import {Message} from '@stomp/stompjs';
You will need to unsubscribe from stomp_subscription (which is an Observer), it will then internally unsubscribe from the underlying STOMP queue subscription.
Call publish(queueName: string, message: string, headers: StompHeaders = {})
(details at: https://stomp-js.github.io/ng2-stompjs/injectables/StompRService.html#publish).
Example:
this._stompService.publish('/topic/ng-demo-sub', 'My important message');
Please note that message
is actually string. So, if you need to send JSON
you will need to convert it into string (typically using
JSON.stringify()
)
stompService.state
is a BehaviorSubject
which maintains and switches
its value as per the underlying Stomp Connection status.stompService.state
and convert
the enum value (which is a number) to the corresponding string value: this._stompService.state
.map((state: number) => StompState[state])
.subscribe((status: string) => {
console.log(`Stomp connection status: ${status}`);
});
If you are interested in watching only when connection is established, you can
subscribe to this._stompService.connectObservable
.
It is usually possible to use Angular dependency injection techniques and APP_INITIALIZER to delay the initialization till the configuration is ready (may be fetched using an API call.) See a sample at: https://github.com/stomp-js/ng2-stompjs-demo
The initialization process can be manually controlled with the additional
class StompRService
which is injected
instead of StompService
. This has a few additional
methods to assign a configuration and manually initiate the connection to the STOMP Broker.
// Do not provide StompService or StompConfig, only provide StompRService
providers: [
StompRService
]
class YourClass {}
constructor(private _stompService: StompRService) { }
public initStomp() {
StompConfig config;
cofig = this.fetchConfigFromSomeWhere();
this._stompService.config = config;
this._stompService.initAndConnect();
}
}
The methods subscribe
and publish
can be called even before call to initAndConnect
.
However these will be queued till the actual connection is successful.
For the curious - initAndConnect
may be called more than once with a potentially
updated configuration.
MIT