@harelpls/use-pusherEasy as React hooks that integrate with the
pusher-jslibrary.
useChannelusePresenceChanneluseEventuseTriggerusePusheruseClientTriggeryarn add @harelpls/use-pusher
You must wrap your app with a PusherProvider and pass it config props for pusher-js initialisation.
import React from "react";
import { PusherProvider } from "@harelpls/use-pusher";
const config = {
// required config props
clientKey: "client-key",
cluster: "ap4",
// optional if you'd like to trigger events. BYO endpoint.
// see "Trigger Server" below for more info
triggerEndpoint: "/pusher/trigger",
// required for private/presence channels
// also sends auth headers to trigger endpoint
authEndpoint: "/pusher/auth",
auth: {
headers: { Authorization: "Bearer token" },
},
};
// Wrap app in provider
const App = () => {
<PusherProvider {...config}>
<Example />
</PusherProvider>;
};
useChannelUse this hook to subscribe to a channel.
// returns channel instance.
const channel = useChannel("channel-name");
usePresenceChannelAugments a regular channel with member functionality.
const Example = () => {
const { members, myID } = usePresenceChannel('presence-awesome');
return (
<ul>
{Object.entries(members)
// filter self from members
.filter([id] => id !== myID)
// map them to a list
.map([id, info] => (
<li key={id}>{info.name}</li>
))
}
</ul>
)
}
useEventBind to events on a channel with a callback.
const Example = () => {
const [message, setMessages] = useState();
const channel = useChannel("channel-name");
useEvent(channel, "message", ({ data }) =>
setMessages((messages) => [...messages, data])
);
};
Note: This will bind and unbind to the event on each render. You may want to memoise your callback with useCallback before passing it in if you notice performance issues.
useTriggerA helper function to create a server triggered event. BYO server (See Trigger Server below). Pass in triggerEndpoint prop to <PusherProvider />. Any auth headers from config.auth.headers automatically get passed to the fetch call.
import { useTrigger } from '@harelpls/use-pusher';
const Example = () => {.
const trigger = useTrigger();
const handleClick = () =>
trigger("channel-name", "event-name", "hello");
return (
<button onClick={handleClick}>Say Hello</button>
)
}
usePusherGet access to the Pusher instance to do other things.
import { usePusher } from "@harelpls/use-pusher";
const Example = () => {
const { client } = usePusher();
client.log("Look ma, logs!");
return null;
};
In order to trigger an event, you'll have to create a simple lambda (or an express server if that's your thing). Below is a short lambda that can handle triggered events from useTrigger.
import Pusher from "pusher";
const pusher = new Pusher({
appId: "app-id",
key: "client-key",
secret: "mad-secret",
cluster: "ap4",
});
export async function handler(event) {
const { channelName, eventName, data } = JSON.parse(event.body);
pusher.trigger(channelName, eventName, data);
return { statusCode: 200 };
}
useClientTriggerI don't want a server though
I hear ya. If you're feeling audacious, you can use client events to push directly from the client:
import { useChannel, useClientTrigger } from "@harelpls/use-pusher";
const Example = () => {
const channel = useChannel("presence-ca");
const trigger = useClientTrigger(channel);
const handleClientEvent = () => {
trigger("Pew pew");
};
return <button onClick={handleClientEvent}>Fire</button>;
};
This project was built using typescript, so types are built-in. Yeeeew!
I've teamed up with @nikolalsvk on pusher-js-mock to bring y'all a great pusher mock.
Testing emitted events with jest can be achieved using jest.mock and @testing-library/react (or enzyme, though your tests should reflect what the user should see NOT how the component handles events internally):
// Example.tsx
import React from "react";
import { useChannel, useEvent } from "@harelpls/use-pusher";
const Example = () => {
const [title, setTitle] = useState();
const channel = useChannel("my-channel");
useEvent(channel, "title", ({ data }) => setTitle(data));
return <span>{title}</span>;
};
// Example.test.tsx
import { render, act } from "@testing-library/react";
import { PusherMock, PusherChannelMock } from "pusher-js-mock";
// mock out the result of the useChannel hook
const mockChannel = new PusherChannelMock();
jest.mock("@harelpls/use-pusher", () => ({
...require.requireActual("@harelpls/use-pusher"),
useChannel: () => mockChannel,
}));
test("should show a title when it receives a title event", async () => {
// mock the client
const client = new PusherMock("client-key", { cluster: "ap4" });
// render component and provider with a mocked context value
const { findByText } = render(
<PusherProvider clientKey="client-key" cluster="ap4" value={{ client }}>
<Example />
</PusherProvider>
);
// emit an event on the mocked channel
act(() => mockChannel.emit("title", { data: "Hello world" }));
// assert expectations
expect(await findByText("Hello world")).toBeInTheDocument();
});
Check out the example tests for testing presence channels.
This package comes with React Native support. Import your PusherProvider from @harelpls/use-pusher/react-native instead of the default @harelpls/use-pusher. All exports are re-exported from there.
Ensure you add the netinfo package to your project too: @react-native-community/netinfo.
import { PusherProvider, useChannel } from "@harelpls/use-pusher/react-native";
yarn && yarn test:watchPlease write tests (100% jest coverage) and types.
MIT © @mayteio
This hook is created using create-react-hook.
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