This library provides a stomp client for Web browsers and nodejs through Web Sockets.
This is a fork of the original stomp-websocket re-written in ES6 and incorporate pending pull requests. All credits goes to the original authors: Jeff Mesnil & Jeff Lindsay.
Only ES5 compatible modern browsers are supported. If you need a websocket polyfill you can use sockjs
As nodejs does not have a WebSocket object like browsers have, you must choose a websocket client and use webstomp.over instead of webstomp.client
. Choosing a good client is maybe the most difficult part:
npm run example
will open examples in browser and try to connect to RabbitMQ Web-Stomp default Web Sockets url.
node run example/broadcast-node.js
will run a dead simple nodejs example.
npm install webstomp-client
<script type="text/javascript" src="node_modules/webstomp-client/dist/webstomp.min.js"></script>
webstomp
will be a global variable.
var webstomp = require('webstomp-client');
import webstomp from 'webstomp-client';
By default it will load dist/webstomp.js
, but the npm package.json es6 entry point to the es6 src file if you prefer loading this version.
Jeff Mesnil stomp-websocket documentation is still a must read even if the API evolved a little
Uses global WebSocket
object for you to return a webstomp Client
object.
Web Sockets endpoint url
options
- protocols: default to
['v10.stomp', 'v11.stomp', 'v12.stomp']
- binary: default to
false
. See binary section.
- heartbeat: default to
{incoming: 10000, outgoing: 10000}
. You can provide false
to cut it (recommended when the server is a SockJS server) or a definition object.
- debug: default to
true
. Will log frame using console.log
['v10.stomp', 'v11.stomp', 'v12.stomp']
false
. See binary section.{incoming: 10000, outgoing: 10000}
. You can provide false
to cut it (recommended when the server is a SockJS server) or a definition object.true
. Will log frame using console.log
over(ws, [options])
Takes a WebSocket
alike object instance to return a webstomp Client
object. Allows you to use another WebSocket
object than the default one. 2 cases for this:
- you do not want
webstomp.client
to create a default instance for you. - you are in an old browser or nodejs and do not have a global
WebSocket
object thatwebstomp.client
can use.
ws
WebSocket
object instance
options
- binary: default to
false
. See binary section.
- heartbeat: default to
{incoming: 10000, outgoing: 10000}
. You can provide false
to cut it (recommended when the server is a SockJS server) or a definition object.
- debug: default to
true
. Will log frame using console.log
false
. See binary section.{incoming: 10000, outgoing: 10000}
. You can provide false
to cut it (recommended when the server is a SockJS server) or a definition object.true
. Will log frame using console.log
VERSIONS
supportedVersions()
List all STOMP specifications supported.
supportedProtocols()
List all websocket STOMP protocols supported. Useful when creating your own WebSocket
instance, although optional, protocols is often the second parameter.
Client
A client instance can and should be created through webstomp.client
or webstomp.over
connect
connect(headers, connectCallback)
connect(headers, connectCallback, errorCallback)
connect(login, passcode, connectCallback)
connect(login, passcode, connectCallback, errorCallback)
connect(login, passcode, connectCallback, errorCallback, host)
disconnect(disconnectCallback, headers={})
send(destination, body='', headers={})
subscribe(destination, callback, headers={})
unsubscribe(id, header={})
It is preferable to unsubscribe from a subscription by calling unsubscribe()
directly on the object returned by client.subscribe()
var subscription = client.subscribe(destination, onmessage);
...
subscription.unsubscribe(headers);
headers
are optionals
begin([transaction])
If no transaction ID is passed, one will be created automatically
commit(transaction)
It is preferable to commit a transaction by calling commit()
directly on the object returned by client.begin()
:
var tx = client.begin(txid);
...
tx.commit();
abort(transaction)
It is preferable to abort a transaction by calling abort()
directly on the object returned by client.begin()
:
var tx = client.begin(txid);
...
tx.abort();
ack(messageID, subscription, headers={})
It is preferable to acknowledge a message by calling ack()
directly on the message handled by a subscription callback:
client.subscribe(destination, (message) => {
// process the message
// acknowledge it
message.ack();
}, {'ack': 'client'}
);
nack(messageID, subscription, headers={})
It is preferable to nack a message by calling nack()
directly on the message handled by a subscription callback:
client.subscribe(destination, (message) => {
// process the message
// acknowledge it
message.nack();
}, {'ack': 'client'}
);
debug
Will use console.log
by default. Override it to update its behavior.
Binary
It is possible to use binary frame instead of string frame over Web Sockets.
- client side: set the binary option to true.
- server side: use a compatible websocket server, like with RabbitMQ Web-Stomp since 3.6
Hearbeat
Not all server are compatible, you may have to deactivate this feature depending the server you are using. For example RabbitMQ Web-Stomp is compatible only since 3.6 with native Web Sockets server.