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What is it?

This package provides a simple RPC mechanism on top of any transport that transfers JSON data. It was initially conceived to provide communication with web workers (and as such supports transferables), but it can be used on top of many other different transport channels, i.e. postMessage between frames, websockets via socket.io or JSON encoded messages over pipes.

How to use it?

Installation

You can install the library into your project via npm

npm install worker-rpc

The library is written in Typescript and will work in any environment that supports ES5 and ES6-style promises (either native or through a shim). No external typings are required for using this library with Typescript (version >= 2).

Web worker example

In this example, we use the library to set up communication with a web worker.

Web worker

import {RpcProvider} from 'worker-rpc';

const rpcProvider = new RpcProvider(
    (message, transfer) => postMessage(message, transfer)
);

onmessage = e => rpcProvider.dispatch(e.data);

rpcProvider.registerRpcHandler('add', ({x, y}) => x + y);

The RPC provider is initialized with a function that dispatches a message. This function will receive an opaque message object as first argument, and a list of transferables as second argument. This allows to leverage transfer of ownership instead of copying between worker and host page.

On incoming messages, dispatch is called on the RPC provider in order to handle the message.

Each registered RPC handler is identified by a message ID (add in this example) and has a handler function that receives the message object and can return a result either as an immediate value or as a promise.

Page

import {RpcProvider} from 'worker-rpc';

const worker = new Worker('worker.js'),
    rpcProvider = new RpcProvider(
        (message, transfer) => worker.postMessage(message, transfer)
    );

worker.onmessage = e => rpcProvider.dispatch(e.data);

rpcProvider
    .rpc('add', {x: 1, y: 2})
    .then(result => console.log(result)); // 3

Importing

ES5 / CommonJS

var RpcProvider = require('worker-rpc').RpcProvider;

ES6

import {RpcProvider} from 'worker-rpc';

Typescript

import {RpcProvider, RpcProviderInterface} from 'worker-rpc';

API

The API is built around the RpcProvider class. A RpcProvider acts both as client and server for RPC calls and event-like signals. The library uses ES6 promises and can consume any A+ compliant promises.

Creating a new provider

const rpc = new RpcProvider(dispatcher, timeout);

Incoming messages

rpc.dispatch(message);

Similar to message dispatch, worker-rpc does not provide a built-in mechanism for receiving messages. Instead, incoming messages must be relayed to the provider by invoking dispatch.

Registering RPC handlers

rpc.registerRpcHandler(id, handler);

Register a handler function for RPC calls with id id. Returns the provider instance.

Registering signal handlers

rpc.registerSignalHandler(id, handler));

Register a handler function for signals with id id. Returns the provider instance.

Dispatching RPC calls

const result = rpc.rpc(id, payload, transfer);

Dispatch a RPC call and returns a promise for its result. The promise is rejected if the call times out or if no handler is registered (or if the handler rejects the operation).

Dispatching signals

rpc.signal(id, payload, transfer);

Dispatch a signal. Returns the provider instance.

Deregistering RPC handlers

rpc.deregisterRpcHandler(id, handler);

id and handler must be the same arguments used for registerRpcHandler. Returns the provider instance.

Deregistering signal handlers

rpc.deregisterSignalHandler(id, handler);

id and handler must be the same arguments used for registerSignalHandler. Returns the provider instance.

Errors

rpc.error.addHandler(errorHandler);

The error event is dispatched if there is either a local or remote communcation error (timeout, invalid id, etc.). Checkout the microevent.ts documentation for the event API.

License

Feel free to use this library under the conditions of the MIT license.