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⛔️ DEPRECATED: interface-connection is now included in libp2p-interfaces
interface-connection
This is a test suite and interface you can use to implement a connection. The connection interface contains all the metadata associated with it, as well as an array of the streams opened through this connection. In the same way as the connection, a stream contains properties with its metadata, plus an iterable duplex object that offers a mechanism for writing and reading data, with back pressure. This module and test suite were heavily inspired by abstract-blob-store and interface-stream-muxer.
The primary goal of this module is to enable developers to pick, swap or upgrade their connection without losing the same API expectations and mechanisms such as back pressure and the ability to half close a connection.
Publishing a test suite as a module lets multiple modules ensure compatibility since they use the same test suite.
Lead Maintainer
Usage
Connection
Before creating a connection from a transport compatible with libp2p
it is important to understand some concepts:
- socket: the underlying raw duplex connection between two nodes. It is created by the transports during a dial/listen.
- multiaddr connection: an abstraction over the socket to allow it to work with multiaddr addresses. It is a duplex connection that transports create to wrap the socket before passing to an upgrader that turns it into a standard connection (see below).
- connection: a connection between two peers that has built in multiplexing and info about the connected peer. It is created from a multiaddr connection by an upgrader. The upgrader uses multistream-select to add secio and multiplexing and returns this object.
- stream: a muxed duplex channel of the
connection
. Each connection may have many streams.
A connection stands for the libp2p communication duplex layer between two nodes. It is not the underlying raw transport duplex layer (socket), such as a TCP socket, but an abstracted layer that sits on top of the raw socket.
This helps ensuring that the transport is responsible for socket management, while also allowing the application layer to handle the connection management.
Test suite
JS
describe('your connection', () => {
require('interface-connection/src/tests')({
async setup () {
return YourConnection
},
async teardown () {
// cleanup resources created by setup()
}
})
})
Go
WIP
API
Connection
A valid connection (one that follows this abstraction), must implement the following API:
- type:
Connection
new Connection({
localAddr,
remoteAddr,
localPeer,
remotePeer,
newStream,
close,
getStreams,
stat: {
direction,
timeline: {
open,
upgraded
},
multiplexer,
encryption
}
})
<Multiaddr> conn.localAddr
<Multiaddr> conn.remoteAddr
<PeerId> conn.localPeer
<PeerId> conn.remotePeer
<Object> conn.stat
<Map> conn.registry
Array<Stream> conn.streams
Promise<object> conn.newStream(Array<protocols>)
<void> conn.removeStream(id)
<Stream> conn.addStream(stream, protocol, metadata)
Promise<> conn.close()
It can be obtained as follows:
const { Connection } = require('interface-connection')
const conn = new Connection({
localAddr: maConn.localAddr,
remoteAddr: maConn.remoteAddr,
localPeer: this._peerId,
remotePeer,
newStream,
close: err => maConn.close(err),
getStreams,
stats: {
direction: 'outbound',
timeline: {
open: maConn.timeline.open,
upgraded: Date.now()
},
multiplexer,
encryption
}
})
Creating a connection instance
JavaScript
-const conn = new Connection({localAddr, remoteAddr, localPeer, remotePeer, newStream, close, getStreams, direction, multiplexer, encryption})
Creates a new Connection instance.
localAddr
is the multiaddr address used by the local peer to reach the remote.
remoteAddr
is the multiaddr address used to communicate with the remote peer.
localPeer
is the PeerId of the local peer.
remotePeer
is the PeerId of the remote peer.
newStream
is the function
responsible for getting a new muxed+multistream-selected stream.
close
is the function
responsible for closing the raw connection.
getStreams
is the function
responsible for getting the streams muxed within the connection.
stats
is an object
with the metadata of the connection. It contains:
direction
is astring
indicating whether the connection isinbound
oroutbound
.timeline
is anobject
with the relevant events timestamps of the connection (open
,upgraded
andclosed
; theclosed
will be added when the connection is closed).multiplexer
is astring
with the connection multiplexing codec (optional).encryption
is astring
with the connection encryption method identifier (optional).
Create a new stream
JavaScript
-conn.newStream(protocols)
Create a new stream within the connection.
protocols
is an array of the intended protocol to use (by order of preference). Example: [/echo/1.0.0]
It returns a Promise
with an object with the following properties:
{
stream,
protocol
}
The stream property contains the muxed stream, while the protocol contains the protocol codec used by the stream.
Add stream metadata
JavaScript
-conn.addStream(stream, { protocol, ...metadata })
Add a new stream to the connection registry.
stream
is a muxed stream.
protocol
is the string codec for the protocol used by the stream. Example: /echo/1.0.0
metadata
is an object containing any additional, optional, stream metadata that you wish to track (such as its tags
).
Remove a from the registry
JavaScript
-conn.removeStream(id)
Removes the stream with the given id from the connection registry.
id
is the unique id of the stream for this connection.
Close connection
JavaScript
-conn.close()
This method closes the connection to the remote peer, as well as all the streams muxed within the connection.
It returns a Promise
.
Connection identifier
JavaScript
-conn.id
This property contains the identifier of the connection.
Connection streams registry
JavaScript
-conn.registry
This property contains a map with the muxed streams indexed by their id. This registry contains the protocol used by the stream, as well as its metadata.
Remote peer
JavaScript
-conn.remotePeer
This property contains the remote peer-id
of this connection.
Local peer
JavaScript
-conn.localPeer
This property contains the local peer-id
of this connection.
Get the connection Streams
JavaScript
-conn.streams
This getter returns all the muxed streams within the connection.
It returns an Array
.
Remote address
JavaScript
-conn.remoteAddr
This getter returns the remote
multiaddr address.
Local address
JavaScript
-conn.localAddr
This getter returns the local
multiaddr address.
Stat
JavaScript
-conn.stat
This getter returns an Object
with the metadata of the connection, as follows:
status
:
This property contains the status of the connection. It can be either open
, closing
or closed
. Once the connection is created it is in an open
status. When a conn.close()
happens, the status will change to closing
and finally, after all the connection streams are properly closed, the status will be closed
.
timeline
:
This property contains an object with the open
, upgraded
and close
timestamps of the connection. Note that, the close
timestamp is undefined
until the connection is closed.
direction
:
This property contains the direction of the peer in the connection. It can be inbound
or outbound
.
multiplexer
:
This property contains the multiplexing
codec being used in the connection.
encryption
:
This property contains the encryption method being used in the connection. It is undefined
if the connection is not encrypted.
Tags
JavaScript
-conn.tags
This property contains an array of tags associated with the connection. New tags can be pushed to this array during the connection's lifetime.