JSON-RPC 2 transport-agnostic library
Installation of the npm package:
> npm install --save json-rpc-peer
This library provides a high-level peer implementation which should be flexible enough to use in any environments.
// ES5
var Peer = require("json-rpc-peer")["default"];
// ES6
import Peer from "json-rpc-peer";
var peer = new Peer(function onMessage(message) {
// Here is the main handler where every incoming
// notification/request message goes.
//
// For a request, this function just has to throw an exception or
// return a value to send the related response.
//
// If the response is asynchronous, just return a promise.
});
The
onMessage
parameter is optional, it can be omitted if this peer does not handle notifications and requests.
Note: For security concerns, only exceptions which are instance of
JsonRpcError
will be transmitted to the remote peer, all others will be substituted by an instance ofUnknownError
.
The peer is now almost ready, but before being usable, it has to be connected to the transport layer.
The simplest interface, the exec()
method, has some limitations (no
notifications support) but is often good enough.
It is often used with non-connected protocols such as HTTP:
var readAllStream = require("read-all-stream");
// For this example we create an HTTP server:
require("http").createServer(
{
port: 8081,
},
function onRequest(req, res) {
// Read the whole request body.
readAllStream(req, function(err, message) {
// Error handling would be better.
if (err) return;
// Here `peer` is not used as a stream, it can therefore be used
// to handle all the connections.
peer.exec(message).then(function(response) {
res.end(response);
});
});
}
);
If you have a connected transport, such as WebSocket, you may want to
use the stream interface: the peer is a duplex stream and can
therefore be connected to other streams via the pipe()
method:
// For this example, we create a WebSocket server:
require("websocket-stream").createServer(
{
port: 8080,
},
function onConnection(stream) {
// Because a stream can only be used once, it is necessary to create
// a dedicated peer per connection.
stream.pipe(new Peer(onMessage)).pipe(stream);
}
);
peer.notify("foo", ["bar"]);
The request()
method returns a promise which will be resolved or
rejected when the response will be received.
peer
.request("add", [1, 2])
.then(function(result) {
console.log(result);
})
.catch(function(error) {
console.error(error.message);
});
Sometimes it is known that current pending requests will not get answered (e.g. connection lost), it is therefore necessary to fail them manually.
peer.request("add", [1, 2]).catch(function(reason) {
console.error(reason);
// → connection lost
});
peer.failPendingRequests("connection lost");
json-rpc-peer
also exports everything fromjson-rpc-protocol
.
// ES5
var peer = require("json-rpc-peer");
var format = peer.format;
var parse = peer.parse;
var JsonRpcError = peer.JsonRpcError;
var InvalidJson = peer.InvalidJson;
var InvalidRequest = peer.InvalidRequest;
var MethodNotFound = peer.MethodNotFound;
var InvalidParameters = peer.InvalidParameters;
// ES2015 (formerly known as ES6)
import {
format,
parse,
JsonRpcError,
InvalidJson,
InvalidRequest,
MethodNotFound,
InvalidParameters,
} from "json-rpc-peer";
# Install dependencies
> yarn
# Run the tests
> yarn test
# Continuously compile
> yarn dev
# Continuously run the tests
> yarn dev-test
# Build for production
> yarn build
Contributions are very welcomed, either on the documentation or on the code.
You may:
- report any issue you've encountered;
- fork and create a pull request.
ISC © Julien Fontanet