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A Symfony bundle to work with Pushpin reverse proxy with fanout/php-gripcontrol library

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GammaPushpinBundle

SensioLabsInsight Build Status

Symfony Bundle that helps you to add a realtime features to your applications using Pushpin reverse proxy. Integrates php-gripcontrol library.

##Features

  • Works with WebSocket-over-HTTP Requests from Pushpin
  • De serializes (using jms/serializer) a TEXT events from Pushpin into DTOs (events) specified by your configuration
  • Handling WebSocketEvent with your specific handler
  • Pushpin helpers to publishing to a channel, subscribing, detaching etc.

Installation

Install a bundle

composer require "gamma/pushpin-bundle"

Register the bundle in app/AppKernel.php:

public function registerBundles()
{
    return array(
        // ...
        new Gamma\Pushpin\PushpinBundle\GammaPushpinBundle()
    );
}

Configuration

// config.yml
gamma_pushpin:
    proxy:
        control_uri: "http://localhost:5561/" # control URI to Pushpin
    web_socket:
        json_events:
            base_namespace: ~

For testing you need to install a Pushpin on dev machine. And enable WebSocket-over-HTTP in routes config file:

* localhost:80,over_http

Usage

Create an event class. Extend AbstractJsonEvent. This class will hold a data from websocket clients:

<?php
namespace AppBundle\WebsocketEvents\Chat;

use Gamma\Pushpin\PushpinBundle\Events\Base\AbstractJsonEvent;
use JMS\Serializer\Annotation\Type as JMS;

class ChatMessage extends AbstractJsonEvent
{

    /**
     * @var string
     * @JMS("string")
     */
    public $room;

    /**
     * @var string
     * @JMS("string")
     */
    public $comment;

}

Update configuration with your new event:

// config.yml
gamma_pushpin:
    // ...
    web_socket:
        json_events:
            base_namespace: 'AppBundle\WebsocketEvents'
            mappings:
                chatMessage: # logical name of your event
                    class: 'Chat\ChatMessage' # base_namespace + clas should give fully qualified class name

Create handler service for your event by extending AbstractEventHandler class:

<?php
namespace AppBundle\Services\WebSocket;

use Gamma\Pushpin\PushpinBundle\Events\Base\AbstractEvent;
use Gamma\Pushpin\PushpinBundle\Handlers\Base\AbstractEventHandler;
use Gamma\Pushpin\PushpinBundle\Interfaces\Events\TextEventInterface;
use GripControl\WebSocketEvent;

class ChatMessageHandler extends AbstractEventHandler
{
    const EVENT_TYPE = TextEventInterface::EVENT_TYPE;

    /**
     * {@inheritdoc}
     */
    public function handle(AbstractEvent $event)
    {
        //your logic


        //Example of creating response event to client:
        //$resultEvent = new WebSocketEvent('TEXT', 'Hello Client');
    }
}

Here you can return a single WebSocketEvent, array of WebSocketEvent objects or WebSocketEventsDTO that holds events as array as well. Register handler as a Symfony service:

//services.yml
services:
    app.chat_message_handler:
        class: AppBundle\Services\Websocket\ChatMessageHandler
        tags:
            - { name: gamma.pushpin.grip_event_handler, type: chatMessage }

Note: Here is type: <logicalEventName> should be similar to logical name of event in configuration.

In a Controller this Events should be passed to GripControl::encode_websocket_events function. So last thing you need to do is to create a simple controller that Pushpin will access.

<?php
namespace AppBundle\Controller;

use Gamma\Pushpin\PushpinBundle\Controller\GripController;
use Gamma\Pushpin\PushpinBundle\DTO\WebSocketEventsDTO;
use Symfony\Component\HttpFoundation\Request;
use Symfony\Component\HttpFoundation\Response;
use Symfony\Component\Routing\Annotation\Route;
use Sensio\Bundle\FrameworkExtraBundle\Configuration\ParamConverter;

class ChatController extends GripController
{

    /**
     * @Route("/websocket/chat", name="app_websocket_chat_message")
     * @param Request $request
     * @param WebSocketEventsDTO $inputEvents
     *
     * @ParamConverter("inputEvents", converter="gamma.web_socket.events", options={"format": "json"})
     * @return Response
     */
    public function chatMessageAction(Request $request, WebSocketEventsDTO $inputEvents)
    {
        return $this->encodeWebSocketEvents(
            $this->get('gamma.pushpin.grip.events_handler')->handleEvents($inputEvents)
        );
    }
}

If everything is ok you should be able to connect to Pushpin's websocket port (7999 by default) with URL: ws://localhost:7999/websocket/chat

You can test with wscat utility:

$ wscat -c ws://localhost:7999/websocket/chat
connected (press CTRL+C to quit)

Now clients can send a message to your application:

chatMessage:{"room":"test","comment":"hello Symfony!"}

This will call your handler and return a result back to a client.

Working with channels

Pushpin works as a publish-subscribe service. So you have ability to subscribe clients to a specific channels and publish a messages to it. Anything that can be a channel in your application should implement a WebSocketChannelInterface with one method getChannelName(). To publish messages you can also use \PubControl\PubControl::publish

By calling methods on gamma.pushpin.pushpin_helper you can:

  • subscribe client to a channel subscribeToChannel($channel)
  • publish to a channel sendWsMessageToChannel($channel, $message)
  • unsubscribe from channel unSubscribeFromChannel($channel)
  • detach connection detachConnection()

Here is additional info on Pushpin

Example of working application

SimpleChatDemo

TODO

  • HTTP streaming with Pushpin
  • more documentation
  • more phpunit

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A Symfony bundle to work with Pushpin reverse proxy with fanout/php-gripcontrol library

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