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Taoensso open-source

CHANGELOG | API | current Break Version:

[com.taoensso/sente "1.15.0"]     ; Stable
[com.taoensso/sente "1.16.0-RC1"] ; Dev, see CHANGELOG for details

Please consider helping to support my continued open-source Clojure/Script work?

Even small contributions can add up + make a big difference to help sustain my time writing, maintaining, and supporting Sente and other Clojure/Script libraries. Thank you!

- Peter Taoussanis

Sente

Realtime web comms for Clojure/Script

Or: We don't need no Socket.IO

Or: core.async + Ajax + WebSockets = The Shiznizzle

Sente is a small client+server library that makes it easy to build reliable, high-performance realtime web applications with Clojure + ClojureScript.

Hero

Sen-te (先手) is a Japanese Go term used to describe a play with such an overwhelming follow-up that it demands an immediate response, leaving its player with the initiative.

(I'd also recommend checking out James Henderson's Chord and Kevin Lynagh's jetty7-websockets-async as possible alternatives!)

Features

  • Bidirectional a/sync comms over both WebSockets and Ajax (auto-fallback)
  • It just works: auto keep-alives, buffering, protocol selection, reconnects
  • Efficient design incl. transparent event batching for low-bandwidth use, even over Ajax
  • Send arbitrary Clojure vals over edn or Transit (JSON, MessagePack, etc.)
  • Tiny API: make-channel-socket! and you're good to go
  • Automatic, sensible support for users connected with multiple clients and/or devices simultaneously
  • Realtime info on which users are connected over which protocols (v0.10.0+)
  • Flexible model: use it anywhere you'd use WebSockets/Ajax/Socket.IO, etc.
  • Standard Ring security model: auth as you like, HTTPS when available, CSRF support, etc.
  • Fully documented, with examples
  • Small codebase: ~1.5k lines for the entire client+server implementation
  • Supported servers: http-kit, Immutant v2+, nginx-clojure, node.js, Aleph, ring-jetty9-adapter

Capabilities

Protocolclient>serverclient>server + ack/replyserver>user push
WebSockets✓ (native)✓ (emulated)✓ (native)
Ajax✓ (emulated)✓ (native)✓ (emulated)

So you can ignore the underlying protocol and deal directly with Sente's unified API. It's simple, and exposes the best of both WebSockets (bidirectionality + performance) and Ajax (optional evented ack/reply model).

Getting started

Note that there's also a variety of full example projects available

Add the necessary dependency to your project:

[com.taoensso/sente "1.15.0"]

On the server (Clojure) side

First make sure that you're using one of the supported web servers (PRs for additional server adapters welcome!).

Somewhere in your web app's code you'll already have a routing mechanism in place for handling Ring requests by request URL. If you're using Compojure for example, you'll have something that looks like this:

(defroutes my-app
  (GET  "/"            req (my-landing-pg-handler  req))
  (POST "/submit-form" req (my-form-submit-handler req)))

For Sente, we're going to add 2 new URLs and setup their handlers:

(ns my-server-side-routing-ns ; .clj
  (:require
    ;; <other stuff>
    [taoensso.sente :as sente] ; <--- Add this

    [ring.middleware.anti-forgery :refer [wrap-anti-forgery]] ; <--- Recommended

    ;; Uncomment a web-server adapter --->
    ;; [taoensso.sente.server-adapters.http-kit      :refer (get-sch-adapter)]
    ;; [taoensso.sente.server-adapters.immutant      :refer (get-sch-adapter)]
    ;; [taoensso.sente.server-adapters.nginx-clojure :refer (get-sch-adapter)]
    ;; [taoensso.sente.server-adapters.aleph         :refer (get-sch-adapter)]
  ))

;;; Add this: --->
(let [{:keys [ch-recv send-fn connected-uids
              ajax-post-fn ajax-get-or-ws-handshake-fn]}
      (sente/make-channel-socket! (get-sch-adapter) {})]

  (def ring-ajax-post                ajax-post-fn)
  (def ring-ajax-get-or-ws-handshake ajax-get-or-ws-handshake-fn)
  (def ch-chsk                       ch-recv) ; ChannelSocket's receive channel
  (def chsk-send!                    send-fn) ; ChannelSocket's send API fn
  (def connected-uids                connected-uids) ; Watchable, read-only atom
  )

(defroutes my-app-routes
  ;; <other stuff>

  ;;; Add these 2 entries: --->
  (GET  "/chsk" req (ring-ajax-get-or-ws-handshake req))
  (POST "/chsk" req (ring-ajax-post                req))
  )

(def my-app
  (-> my-app-routes
      ;; Add necessary Ring middleware:
      ring.middleware.keyword-params/wrap-keyword-params
      ring.middleware.params/wrap-params
      ring.middleware.anti-forgery/wrap-anti-forgery
      ring.middleware.session/wrap-session))

The ring-ajax-post and ring-ajax-get-or-ws-handshake fns will automatically handle Ring GET and POST requests to our channel socket URL ("/chsk"). Together these take care of the messy details of establishing + maintaining WebSocket or long-polling requests.

Add a CSRF token somewhere in your HTML:

(let [csrf-token (force ring.middleware.anti-forgery/*anti-forgery-token*)]
  [:div#sente-csrf-token {:data-csrf-token csrf-token}])

On the client (ClojureScript) side

You'll setup something similar on the client side:

(ns my-client-side-ns ; .cljs
  (:require-macros
   [cljs.core.async.macros :as asyncm :refer (go go-loop)])
  (:require
   ;; <other stuff>
   [cljs.core.async :as async :refer (<! >! put! chan)]
   [taoensso.sente  :as sente :refer (cb-success?)] ; <--- Add this
  ))

;;; Add this: --->

(def ?csrf-token
  (when-let [el (.getElementById js/document "sente-csrf-token")]
    (.getAttribute el "data-csrf-token")))

(let [{:keys [chsk ch-recv send-fn state]}
      (sente/make-channel-socket-client!
       "/chsk" ; Note the same path as before
       ?csrf-token
       {:type :auto ; e/o #{:auto :ajax :ws}
       })]

  (def chsk       chsk)
  (def ch-chsk    ch-recv) ; ChannelSocket's receive channel
  (def chsk-send! send-fn) ; ChannelSocket's send API fn
  (def chsk-state state)   ; Watchable, read-only atom
  )

Now what?

The client will automatically initiate a WebSocket or repeating long-polling connection to your server. Client<->server events are now ready to transmit over the ch-chsk channel.

Last step: you'll want to hook your own event handlers up to this channel. Please see one of the example projects for details.

Client-side API

  • ch-recv is a core.async channel that'll receive event-msgs
  • chsk-send! is a (fn [event & [?timeout-ms ?cb-fn]]) for standard client>server req>resp calls

Server-side API

  • ch-recv is a core.async channel that'll receive event-msgs
  • chsk-send! is a (fn [user-id event]) for async server>user PUSH calls

===============

TermForm
event[<ev-id> <?ev-data>], e.g. [:my-app/some-req {:data "data"}]
server event-msg{:keys [event id ?data send-fn ?reply-fn uid ring-req client-id]}
client event-msg{:keys [event id ?data send-fn]}
<ev-id>A namespaced keyword like :my-app/some-req
<?ev-data>An optional arbitrary edn value like {:data "data"}
:ring-reqRing map for Ajax request or WebSocket's initial handshake request
:?reply-fnPresent only when client requested a reply

Summary

  • So clients can use chsk-send! to send events to the server and optionally request a reply with timeout
  • The server can likewise use chsk-send! to send events to all the clients (browser tabs, devices, etc.) of a particular connected user by his/her user-id
  • The server can also use an event-msg's ?reply-fn to reply to a particular client event using an arbitrary edn value

It's worth noting that the server>user push (chsk-send! <user-id> <event>) takes a mandatory user-id argument. See the FAQ later for more info.

Ajax/Sente comparison: client>server

(jayq/ajax ; Using the jayq wrapper around jQuery
 {:type :post :url "/some-url-on-server/"
  :data {:name "Rich Hickey"
         :type "Awesome"}
  :timeout 8000
  :success (fn [content text-status xhr]
             (do-something! content))
  :error   (fn [xhr text-status] (error-handler!))})

(chsk-send! ; Using Sente
  [:some/request-id {:name "Rich Hickey" :type "Awesome"}] ; Event
  8000 ; Timeout
  ;; Optional callback:
  (fn [reply] ; Reply is arbitrary Clojure data
    (if (sente/cb-success? reply) ; Checks for :chsk/closed, :chsk/timeout, :chsk/error
      (do-something! reply)
      (error-handler!))))

Some important differences to note:

  • The Ajax request is slow to initialize, and bulky (HTTP overhead)
  • The Sente request is pre-initialized (usu. WebSocket), and lean (edn/Transit protocol)

Ajax/Sente comparison: server>user push

  • Ajax would require clumsy long-polling setup, and wouldn't easily support users connected with multiple clients simultaneously
  • Sente: (chsk-send! "destination-user-id" [:some/alert-id <arb-clj-data-payload>])

Channel socket client state

Each time the channel socket client's state changes, a client-side :chsk/state event will fire that you can watch for and handle like any other event.

The event form is [:chsk/state [<old-state-map> <new-state-map>]] with the following possible state map keys:

KeyValue
:typee/o #{:auto :ws :ajax}
:open?Truthy iff chsk appears to be open (connected) now
:ever-opened?Truthy iff chsk handshake has ever completed successfully
:first-open?Truthy iff chsk just completed first successful handshake
:uidUser id provided by server on handshake, or nil
:csrf-tokenCSRF token provided by server on handshake, or nil
:handshake-dataArb user data provided by server on handshake
:last-ws-error?{:udt _ :ev <WebSocket-on-error-event>}
:last-ws-close?{:udt _ :ev <WebSocket-on-close-event> :clean? _ :code _ :reason _}
:last-close?{:udt _ :reason _}, with reason e/o #{nil :requested-disconnect :requested-reconnect :downgrading-ws-to-ajax :unexpected}

Example projects

LinkDescription
Official exampleOfficial Sente reference example, always up-to-date
@laforge49/sente-bootExample using Sente v1.11.0, Boot (also works with Windows)
@laforge49/sente-boot-reagentExample using Sente v1.11.0, Boot, and Reagent
@tiensonqin/lymchatExample chat app using React Native
@danielsz/system-websocketsClient-side UI, login and wiring of components
@timothypratley/snakelakeMultiplayer snake game with screencast walkthrough
@theasp/sente-nodejs-exampleRef. example adapted for Node.js servers (Express, Dog Fort), as well as a node.js client
@ebellani/carpetWeb+mobile interface for a remmitance application
@danielsz/sente-systemRef example adapted for @danielsz/system
@danielsz/sente-bootRef example adapted for boot
@seancorfield/om-sente??
@tfoldi/data15-blackjackMultiplayer blackjack game with documented source code
@davidvujic/sente-with-reagent-and-re-frameExample code that combines Sente with Reagent and re-frame in a single page application
Your link here?PR's welcome!

FAQ

What is the user-id provided to the server>user push fn?

There's now also a full user-id, client-id summary up here

For the server to push events, we need a destination. Traditionally we might push to a client (e.g. browser tab). But with modern rich web applications and the increasing use of multiple simultaneous devices (tablets, mobiles, etc.) - the value of a client push is diminishing. You'll often see applications (even by Google) struggling to deal with these cases.

Sente offers an out-the-box solution by pulling the concept of identity one level higher and dealing with unique users rather than clients. What constitutes a user is entirely at the discretion of each application:

  • Each user-id may have zero or more connected clients at any given time
  • Each user-id may survive across clients (browser tabs, devices), and sessions

To give a user an identity, either set the user's :uid Ring session key OR supply a :user-id-fn (takes request, returns an identity string) to the make-channel-socket! constructor.

If you want a simple per-session identity, generate a random uuid. If you want an identity that persists across sessions, try use something with semantic meaning that you may already have like a database-generated user-id, a login email address, a secure URL fragment, etc.

Note that user-ids are used only for server>user push. client>server requests don't take a user-id.

As of Sente v0.13.0+ it's also possible to send events to :sente/all-users-without-uid.

How do I integrate Sente with my usual login/auth procedure?

This is trivially easy as of Sente v0.13.0+. Please see one of the example projects for details.

Will Sente work with Reactjs/Reagent/Om/Pedestel/etc.?

Sure! Sente's just a client<->server comms mechanism so it'll work with any view/rendering approach you'd like.

I have a strong preference for Reagent myself, so would recommend checking that out first if you're still evaluating options.

What if I need to use JSON, XML, raw strings, etc.?

As of v1, Sente uses an extensible client<->server serialization mechanism. It uses edn by default since this usu. gives good performance and doesn't require any external dependencies. The reference example project shows how you can plug in an alternative de/serializer. In particular, note that Sente ships with a Transit de/serializer that allows manual or smart (automatic) per-payload format selection.

How do I add custom Transit read and write handlers?

To add custom handlers to the TransitPacker, pass them in as writer-opts and reader-opts when creating a TransitPacker. These arguments are the same as the opts map you would pass directly to transit/writer. The code sample below shows how you would do this to add a write handler to convert Joda-Time DateTime objects to Transit time objects.

(ns my-ns.app
  (:require [cognitect.transit :as transit]
            [taoensso.sente.packers.transit :as sente-transit])
  (:import [org.joda.time DateTime ReadableInstant]))

;; From http://increasinglyfunctional.com/2014/09/02/custom-transit-writers-clojure-joda-time/
(def joda-time-writer
  (transit/write-handler
    (constantly "m")
    (fn [v] (-> ^ReadableInstant v .getMillis))
    (fn [v] (-> ^ReadableInstant v .getMillis .toString))))

(def packer (sente-transit/->TransitPacker :json {:handlers {DateTime joda-time-writer}} {}))

How do I route client/server events?

However you like! If you don't have many events, a simple cond will probably do. Otherwise a multimethod dispatching against event ids works well (this is the approach taken in the reference example project).

Security: is there HTTPS support?

Yup, it's automatic for both Ajax and WebSockets. If the page serving your JavaScript (ClojureScript) is running HTTPS, your Sente channel sockets will run over HTTPS and/or the WebSocket equivalent (WSS).

Security: CSRF protection?

This is important. Sente has support, and use is strongly recommended. You'll need to use middleware like ring-anti-forgery or ring-defaults to generate and check CSRF codes. The ring-ajax-post handler should be covered (i.e. protected).

Please see one of the example projects for a fully-baked example.

Pageload: How do I know when Sente is ready client-side?

You'll want to listen on the receive channel for a [:chsk/state [_ {:first-open? true}]] event. That's the signal that the socket's been established.

How can server-side channel socket events modify a user's session?

Update: @danielsz has kindly provided a detailed example here.

Recall that server-side event-msgs are of the form {:ring-req _ :event _ :?reply-fn _}, so each server-side event is accompanied by the relevant[*] Ring request.

For WebSocket events this is the initial Ring HTTP handshake request, for Ajax events it's just the Ring HTTP Ajax request.

The Ring request's :session key is an immutable value, so how do you modify a session in response to an event? You won't be doing this often, but it can be handy (e.g. for login/logout forms).

You've got two choices:

  1. Write any changes directly to your Ring SessionStore (i.e. the mutable state that's actually backing your sessions). You'll need the relevant user's session key, which you can find under your Ring request's :cookies key. This is flexible, but requires that you know how+where your session data is being stored.

  2. Just use regular HTTP Ajax requests for stuff that needs to modify sessions (like login/logout), since these will automatically go through the usual Ring session middleware and let you modify a session with a simple {:status 200 :session <new-session>} response. This is the strategy the reference example takes.

Lifecycle management (component management/shutdown, etc.)

Using something like @stuartsierra/component or @palletops/leaven?

Most of Sente's state is held internally to each channel socket (the map returned from client/server calls to make-channel-socket!). The absence of global state makes things like testing, and running multiple concurrent connections easy. It also makes integration with your component management easy.

The only thing you may[1] want to do on component shutdown is stop any router loops that you've created to dispatch events to handlers. The client/server side start-chsk-router! fns both return a (fn stop []) that you can call to do this.

[1] The cost of not doing this is actually negligible (a single parked go thread).

There's also a couple lifecycle libraries that include Sente components:

  1. @danielsz/system for use with @stuartsierra/component
  2. @palletops/bakery for use with @palletops/leaven

How to debug/benchmark Sente at the protocol level?

@arichiardi has kindly provided notes on some of Sente's current implementation details here.

Any other questions?

If I've missed something here, feel free to open a GitHub issue or pop me an email!

Contacting me / contributions

Please use the project's GitHub issues page for all questions, ideas, etc. Pull requests welcome. See the project's GitHub contributors page for a list of contributors.

Otherwise, you can reach me at Taoensso.com. Happy hacking!

- Peter Taoussanis

License

Distributed under the EPL v1.0 (same as Clojure).
Copyright © 2014-2020 Peter Taoussanis.

Can you improve this documentation? These fine people already did:
Peter Taoussanis, Daniel Szmulewicz, Daniel Compton, Sebastian Bensusan, Justin Grimes, Toby Crawley, Andrew Phillips, Earl St Sauver, u0xee, Timothy Pratley, Földi Tamás, Matt Ford, ReadmeCritic, Eduardo Bellani, davidvujic, whodidthis, Thomas Crowley & Sam Ritchie
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