MIT
With CocoaPods. Add the following line to your Podfile:
pod "SwiftDDP", "~> 0.4.1"
With Swift Package Manager. Add the following line to the dependencies in your Package.swift:
.package(url: "https://github.com/y-ich/SwiftDDP.git", .branch("master")),
import SwiftDDP
Meteor.client.allowSelfSignedSSL = true // Connect to a server that uses a self signed ssl certificate
Meteor.client.logLevel = .Info // Options are: .Verbose, .Debug, .Info, .Warning, .Error, .Severe, .None
// Meteor.connect will automatically connect and will sign in using
// a stored login token if the client was previously signed in.
Meteor.connect("wss://todos.meteor.com/websocket") {
// do something after the client connects
}
Login using email and password.
Meteor.loginWithPassword("[email protected]", password: "********") { result, error in
// do something after login
}
Login using username and password.
Meteor.loginWithUsername("swiftddp", password: "********") { result, error in
// do something after login
}
Log out.
Meteor.logout() { result, error in
// do something after logout
}
The client also posts a notification when the user signs in and signs out, and during connection failure events.
// Notification name (a string global variable)
DDP_USER_DID_LOGIN
DDP_USER_DID_LOGOUT
//Websocket/DDP connection failure events
DDP_WEBSOCKET_CLOSE
DDP_WEBSOCKET_ERROR
DDP_DISCONNECTED
DDP_FAILED
// Example
NSNotificationCenter.defaultCenter().addObserver(self, selector: "userDidLogin", name: DDP_USER_DID_LOGIN, object: nil)
NSNotificationCenter.defaultCenter().addObserver(self, selector: "userDidLogout", name: DDP_USER_DID_LOGOUT, object: nil)
func userDidLogin() {
print("The user just signed in!")
}
func userDidLogout() {
print("The user just signed out!")
}
Meteor.subscribe("todos")
Meteor.subscribe("todos") {
// Do something when the todos subscription is ready
}
Meteor.subscribe("todos", [1,2,3,4]) {
// Do something when the todos subscription is ready
}
// Suppose you want to subscribe to a list of all cities and towns near a specific major city
// Subscribe to cities near Boston
let id1 = Meteor.subscribe("cities", ["lat": 42.358056 ,"lon": -71.063611]) {
// You are now subscribed to cities associated with the coordinates 42.358056, -71.063611
// id1 contains a key that allows you to cancel the subscription associated with
// the parameters ["lat": 42.358056 ,"lon": -71.063611]
}
// Subscribe to cities near Paris
let id2 = Meteor.subscribe("cities", ["lat": 48.8567, "lon": 2.3508]){
// You are now subscribed to cities associated with the coordinates 48.8567, 2.3508
// id2 contains a key that allows you to cancel the subscription associated with
// the parameters ["lat": 48.8567 ,"lon": 2.3508]
}
// Subscribe to cities near New York
let id3 = Meteor.subscribe("cities", ["lat": 40.7127, "lon": -74.0059]){
// You are now subscribed to cities associated with the coordinates 40.7127, -74.0059
// id3 contains a key that allows you to cancel the subscription associated with
// the parameters ["lat": 40.7127 ,"lon": -74.0059]
}
// When these subscriptions have completed, the collection associated with "cities" will now contain all
// documents returned from the three subscriptions
Meteor.unsubscribe(withId: id2)
// Your collection will now contain cities near Boston and New York, but not Paris
Meteor.unsubscribe("cities")
// You are now unsubscribed to all subscriptions associated with the publication "cities"
Meteor.call("foo", [1, 2, 3, 4]) { result, error in
// Do something with the method result
}
When passing parameters to a server method, the parameters object must be serializable with NSJSONSerialization
SwiftDDP includes a class called MeteorCollection that provides simple, ephemeral dictionary backed persistence. MeteorCollection stores objects subclassed from MeteorDocument. Creating a collection is as simple as:
class List: MeteorDocument {
var collection:String = "lists"
var name:String?
var userId:String?
}
let lists = MeteorCollection<List>(name: "lists") // As with Meteorjs, the name is the name of the server-side collection
Meteor.subscribe("lists")
For client side insertions, updates and removals:
let list = List(id: Meteor.client.getId(), fields: ["name": "foo"])
// Insert the object on both the client and server.
lists.insert(list)
// Update the object on both the client and server
list.name = "bar"
lists.update(list)
// Remove the object on both the client and server
lists.remove(list)
For each operation the action is executed on the client, and rolled back if the server returns an error.
If you make a command line tool, you need to call the function dispatchMain in main thread after proper DDP settings. Otherwise, you will encounter a dead lock.
Meteor.connect("wss://todos.meteor.com/websocket") {
// do something after the client connects
}
dispatchMain()
The following pattern can be used to create custom collections backed by any datastore
In this example, we'll create a simple collection to hold a list of contacts. The first thing we'll do is create an object to represent a contact. This object has four properties and a method named update that maps the fields NSDictionary to the struct's properties. Update is called when an object is created and when an update is performed. Meteor will always transmit an id to identify the object that should be added, updated or removed, so objects that represent Meteor documents must always have an id field. Here we're sticking to the MongoDB convention of naming our id _id.
struct Contact {
var _id:String?
var name:String?
var phone:String?
var email:String?
init(id:String, fields:NSDictionary?) {
self._id = id
update(fields)
}
mutating func update(fields:NSDictionary?) {
if let name = fields?.valueForKey("name") as? String {
self.name = name
}
if let phone = fields?.valueForKey("phone") as? String {
self.phone = phone
}
if let email = fields?.valueForKey("email") as? String {
self.email = email
}
}
}
Next, we'll create the collection class that will hold our contacts and provide the logic to respond to server-side changes to the documents and the subscription set. SwiftDDP contains an abstract class called AbstractCollection that can be used to build custom collections. Subclassing AbstractCollection allows you to override three methods that are called in response to events on the server: documentWasAdded, documentWasChanged and documentWasRemoved.
class UserCollection: AbstractCollection {
var contacts = [Contact]()
// Include any logic that needs to occur when a document is added to the collection on the server
override public func documentWasAdded(collection:String, id:String, fields:NSDictionary?) {
let user = User(id, fields)
users.append(user)
}
// Include any logic that needs to occur when a document is changed on the server
override public func documentWasChanged(collection:String, id:String, fields:NSDictionary?, cleared:[String]?) {
if let index = contacts.indexOf({ contact in return contact._id == id }) {
contact = contacts[index]
contact.update(fields)
contacts[index] = contact
}
}
// Include any logic that needs to occur when a document is removed on the server
override public func documentWasRemoved(collection:String, id:String) {
if let index = contacts.indexOf({ contact in return contact._id == id }) {
contacts[index] = nil
}
}
}
So far, we're able to process documents that have been added, changed or removed on the server. But the UserCollection class still lacks the ability to make changes to both the local datastore and on the server. We'll change that. In the UserCollection class, create a method called insert.
class UserCollection: AbstractCollection {
/*
override public func documentWasAdded ...
override public func documentWasChanged ...
override public func documentWasRemoved ...
*/
public func insert(contact: Contact) {
// (1) save the document to the contacts array
contacts[contacts._id] = contact
// (2) now try to insert the document on the server
client.insert(self.name, document: [contacts.fields()]) { result, error in
// (3) However, if the server returns an error, reverse the action on the client by
// removing the document from the contacts collection
if error != nil {
self.contacts[contact._id] = nil
log.error("\(error!)")
}
}
}
}
The key parts of this method are:
- (1) save the new contact to the array we created in UserCollection
- (2) invoke client.insert to initiate an insert on the server
- (3) remove the contact from the local store if the server rejects the insert
Creating update and remove methods are also easy to create, and follow the same patern as insert. For a more extensive example of the patterns shown here, have a look at MeteorCollection.swift. MeteorCollection is an in-memory collection implementation suitable for simple applications.
- Updated to Swift 3.0
- Bugfixes
- Bug fixed that affected DDP dates in 32 bit environments
- Changed default subscription behavior
- Added a method to sign a user in via username
Version 0.3.0 contains breaking changes
- You can now update a subscription by changing its parameters without first unsubscribing. This will subscribe the client to any documents associated with the new subscription and parameters. When you pass a new set of parameters to a subscription that you have previously subscribed to, you remain subscribed to any documents associated with that prior subscription.
- The subscription method returns an id. To unsubscribe to documents associated with a specific set of parameters, you must unsubscribe with this id.
- Unsubscribing by name now works differently. When unsubscribing by name, you unsubscribe to any and all subscriptions with that name.
- You can no longer pass a callback to
unsubscribe(name:String)
. It now returns an array with the ids of the subscriptions you've unsubscribed to.
- Improved subscription handling across app states
- Dependencies updated for Swift 2.2
- Reconnection behavior improvements: reconnect attempts now follow an exponential backoff pattern
- Client now connects to servers using self signed SSL certificates when allowSelfSignedSSL is set to true
- The loglevel can now be set directly using the logLevel property on the client. The default setting is .None
- Integration with Meteor's Facebook, Twitter & other login services
Pull requests, feature requests are feedback are welcome. If you're using SwiftDDP in a production app, let us know.