gentle_rpc

JSON-RPC 2.0 library with WebSockets and HTTP support for deno and the browser.

Server

respond

Takes the arguments methods, req and options. You can set options for an additional server argument, protocol, headers and public error stacks.

import { serve } from "https://deno.land/std@0.97.0/http/server.ts";
import { respond } from "https://deno.land/x/gentle_rpc/mod.ts";

const server = serve("0.0.0.0:8000");
const rpcMethods = {
  sayHello: (w: [string]) => `Hello ${w}`,
  callNamedParameters: ({ a, b, c }: { a: number; b: number; c: string }) =>
    `${c} ${a * b}`,
  animalsMakeNoise: (noise: string[]) =>
    noise.map((el) => el.toUpperCase()).join(" "),
};

console.log("listening on 0.0.0.0:8000");

for await (const req of server) {
  // HTTP:
  await respond(rpcMethods, req);
  // WebSockets:
  await respond(rpcMethods, req, { proto: "ws" });
}

Client

createRemote

Takes a resource for HTTP or a WebSocket for WebSockets and returns a TypeScript Proxy or Promise<Proxy> which we will call remote from now on.

import { createRemote } from "https://deno.land/x/gentle_rpc/mod.ts";
// Or import directly into the browser with:
import { createRemote } from "https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/gh/timonson/gentle_rpc@v2.8/client/dist/remote.js";

// HTTP:
const remote = createRemote("http://0.0.0.0:8000");

// WebSocket:
const remote = await createRemote(new WebSocket("ws://0.0.0.0:8000"));

HTTP

remote

All remote methods take an Array<JsonValue> or Record<string, JsonValue> object and return Promise<JsonValue | undefined>.

const greeting = await remote.sayHello(["World"]);
// Hello World

const namedParams = await remote.callNamedParameters({
  a: 5,
  b: 10,
  c: "result:",
});
// result: 50
notification
const notification = await remote.sayHello.notify(["World"]);
// undefined
auth

This method will set the Authorization header to `Bearer ${jwt}`.

const greeting = await remote.sayHello.auth(jwt)(["World"]);
// Hello World
batch
const noise1 = await remote.animalsMakeNoise.batch([
  ["miaaow"],
  ["wuuuufu", "wuuuufu"],
  ["iaaaiaia", "iaaaiaia", "iaaaiaia"],
  ["fiiiiire"],
]);
// [ "MIAAOW", "WUUUUFU WUUUUFU", "IAAAIAIA IAAAIAIA IAAAIAIA", "FIIIIIRE" ]
batch with different methods

Takes either a batchObject or a batchArray as argument and returns a promise.

await remote.batch({
  cat: ["sayHello", ["miaaow"]],
  dog: ["animalsMakeNoise", ["wuuuufu"]],
  donkey: ["sayHello"],
  dragon: ["animalsMakeNoise", ["fiiiiire", "fiiiiire"]],
});
// { cat: "Hello miaaow", dog: "WUUUUFU", donkey: "Hello ", dragon: "FIIIIIRE FIIIIIRE" }

The example above uses the object keys cat, dog, donkey, dragon as RPC request object ids under the hood. The returned RPC result values will be assigned to these keys.

For other use cases you might prefer the following example:

await remote.batch([
  "animalsMakeNoise",
  ["miaaow"],
  ["wuuuufu", "wuuuufu"],
  ["iaaaiaia", "iaaaiaia", "iaaaiaia"],
  ["fiiiiire"],
]);
// [ "MIAAOW", "WUUUUFU WUUUUFU", "IAAAIAIA IAAAIAIA IAAAIAIA", "FIIIIIRE" ]

WebSockets

The support for WebSockets is still experimental and has not been fully tested yet.

remote

All remote methods take an Array<JsonValue> or Record<string, JsonValue> object and return Promise<JsonValue | undefined>.

const noise = await remote.animalsMakeNoise(["wuufff"]);
console.log(noise);

remote.socket.close();
notification
const notification = await remote.animalsMakeNoise.notify(["wuufff"]);
messaging between multiple clients

By using the subscribe method you can send messages between multiple clients. It returns an object with a generator property { generator: AsyncGenerator<JsonValue>} and the methods emit, emitBatch and unsubscribe.

Other clients can listen to and emit messages by subscribing to the same method.

// First client
export async function run(iter: AsyncGenerator<unknown>) {
  try {
    for await (let x of iter) {
      console.log(x);
    }
  } catch (err) {
    console.log(err.message, err.code);
  }
}

const greeting = remote.sayHello.subscribe();
run(greeting.generator);
greeting.emit(["first"]);
// Hello first
// Hello second
// Hello third
// Second client
const greeting = remote.sayHello.subscribe();
run(greeting.generator);
greeting.emitBatch([["second"], ["third"]]);
// Hello first
// Hello second
// Hello third

// You can optionally unsubscribe:
greeting.unsubscribe();

Examples and Tests

Checkout the examples and tests folders for more detailed examples.

Contribution

Every kind of contribution to this project is highly appreciated.
Please run deno fmt on the changed files before making a pull request.