static files server designed for node written in typescript, with tests
with web-sockets micro-service manager, at the same port
express for routingsocket.io for websocketshttps://chef-socket.pietal.dev/
$ yarn add chef-socket
$ yarn chef-socket node_modules/chef-socket/demo --plugin node_modules/chef-socket/chat.js
const { cook, chat } = require("chef-socket");
cook({
folder: "node_modules/chef-socket/demo",
plugins: { chat },
}).then((server) => {
console.log(server.config);
});
$ npx chef-socket folder [--plugin node_modules/chef-socket/chat.js]
const { cook } = require("chef-socket");
cook({ folder: "folder" }).then((server: Express.Application) => {
// server api is get, post, any
server.any("/*", (req: Express.Request, res: Express.Response) => {
res.end("200 OK");
});
});
folder param is omitted default
index.html is read from folder = '.'
port specified
For more information about config parameters read:
The plugins are a mighty thing, think of them like chat rooms,
after a client handshakes the chat room, his messages start being forwarded to that room,
and it is being handled there by the room's own plugin.
This means you can have for example: a chat server and other unrelated websocket services
at the same port as the files server too. One client may be in many rooms.
socket.io-client connects to
location.origin.replace(/^http/, 'ws')
config.join events
join event with room name
(topic/plugin name)
config.leave)
(ws, { id, event, data })
this) of each plugin is the
server instance.
type Event = {
id: string; // socket gains unique id on connection
event: string; // event name to send in frontend/receive in backend
data?: any; // defaults to undefined, can be serializable primitive or JSON
}
MIT