Connects node.js as a nrepl client to a Clojure nrepl server.
This is different from cljs-noderepl and similar projects as it does not connect node.js as the repl "target" (so that a nrepl Clojure client can eval code in a JS context) but the other way around ;)
To connect to a running nREPL server and send and receive an eval request do:
var client = require('nrepl-client').connect({port: 7889});
client.once('connect', function() {
var expr = '(+ 3 4)';
client.eval(expr, function(err, result) {
console.log('%s => ', expr, err || result);
client.end();
});
});
For a more detailed example and to use node.js also to start an nREPL Clojure process see examples/simple-connect.js.
-
connect(options)
- Creates a
net.Socket
connection to an nREPL server. The connection object itself will have added methods, see below. options
: options from thenet.connect
call.- returns a
net.Socket
clojure connection
- Creates a
-
clojure connection
- Wraps nREPL messages.
clone([session,] callback)
close([session,] callback)
describe([verbose,] callback)
eval(code, [session, id, evalFunc,] callback)
interrupt(session, id, callback)
loadFile(fileContent, [fileName, filePath,] callback)
lsSessions(callback)
stdin(stdin, callback)
send(msgObj, callback)
sends a custom message
-
start(options, callback)
options
options for configuring the nREPL server. Optional.options == {startTimeout: NUMBER, verbose: BOOL, projectPath: STRING, hostname: STRING, port: NUMBER}
. See nrepl-server.js for defaults.callback(err, serverState)
function called when the server is started.serverState == {proc: PROCESS, hostname: STRING, port: NUMBER, started: BOOL, exited: BOOL, timedout: BOOL}
-
stop(serverState, callback)
serverState
serverState returned from startcallback(err)
function called when the server is stopped