require "set" module ActionCable module Channel # The channel provides the basic structure of grouping behavior into logical units when communicating over the WebSocket connection. # You can think of a channel like a form of controller, but one that's capable of pushing content to the subscriber in addition to simply # responding to the subscriber's direct requests. # # Channel instances are long-lived. A channel object will be instantiated when the cable consumer becomes a subscriber, and then # lives until the consumer disconnects. This may be seconds, minutes, hours, or even days. That means you have to take special care # not to do anything silly in a channel that would balloon its memory footprint or whatever. The references are forever, so they won't be released # as is normally the case with a controller instance that gets thrown away after every request. # # Long-lived channels (and connections) also mean you're responsible for ensuring that the data is fresh. If you hold a reference to a user # record, but the name is changed while that reference is held, you may be sending stale data if you don't take precautions to avoid it. # # The upside of long-lived channel instances is that you can use instance variables to keep reference to objects that future subscriber requests # can interact with. Here's a quick example: # # class ChatChannel < ApplicationCable::Channel # def subscribed # @room = Chat::Room[params[:room_number]] # end # # def speak(data) # @room.speak data, user: current_user # end # end # # The #speak action simply uses the Chat::Room object that was created when the channel was first subscribed to by the consumer when that # subscriber wants to say something in the room. # # == Action processing # # Unlike subclasses of ActionController::Base, channels do not follow a RESTful # constraint form for their actions. Instead, Action Cable operates through a # remote-procedure call model. You can declare any public method on the # channel (optionally taking a data argument), and this method is # automatically exposed as callable to the client. # # Example: # # class AppearanceChannel < ApplicationCable::Channel # def subscribed # @connection_token = generate_connection_token # end # # def unsubscribed # current_user.disappear @connection_token # end # # def appear(data) # current_user.appear @connection_token, on: data['appearing_on'] # end # # def away # current_user.away @connection_token # end # # private # def generate_connection_token # SecureRandom.hex(36) # end # end # # In this example, the subscribed and unsubscribed methods are not callable methods, as they # were already declared in ActionCable::Channel::Base, but #appear # and #away are. #generate_connection_token is also not # callable, since it's a private method. You'll see that appear accepts a data # parameter, which it then uses as part of its model call. #away # does not, since it's simply a trigger action. # # Also note that in this example, current_user is available because # it was marked as an identifying attribute on the connection. All such # identifiers will automatically create a delegation method of the same name # on the channel instance. # # == Rejecting subscription requests # # A channel can reject a subscription request in the #subscribed callback by # invoking the #reject method: # # class ChatChannel < ApplicationCable::Channel # def subscribed # @room = Chat::Room[params[:room_number]] # reject unless current_user.can_access?(@room) # end # end # # In this example, the subscription will be rejected if the # current_user does not have access to the chat room. On the # client-side, the Channel#rejected callback will get invoked when # the server rejects the subscription request. class Base include Callbacks include PeriodicTimers include Streams include Naming include Broadcasting attr_reader :params, :connection, :identifier delegate :logger, to: :connection class << self # A list of method names that should be considered actions. This # includes all public instance methods on a channel, less # any internal methods (defined on Base), adding back in # any methods that are internal, but still exist on the class # itself. # # ==== Returns # * Set - A set of all methods that should be considered actions. def action_methods @action_methods ||= begin # All public instance methods of this class, including ancestors methods = (public_instance_methods(true) - # Except for public instance methods of Base and its ancestors ActionCable::Channel::Base.public_instance_methods(true) + # Be sure to include shadowed public instance methods of this class public_instance_methods(false)).uniq.map(&:to_s) methods.to_set end end private # action_methods are cached and there is sometimes need to refresh # them. ::clear_action_methods! allows you to do that, so next time # you run action_methods, they will be recalculated. def clear_action_methods! # :doc: @action_methods = nil end # Refresh the cached action_methods when a new action_method is added. def method_added(name) # :doc: super clear_action_methods! end end def initialize(connection, identifier, params = {}) @connection = connection @identifier = identifier @params = params # When a channel is streaming via pubsub, we want to delay the confirmation # transmission until pubsub subscription is confirmed. # # The counter starts at 1 because it's awaiting a call to #subscribe_to_channel @defer_subscription_confirmation_counter = Concurrent::AtomicFixnum.new(1) @reject_subscription = nil @subscription_confirmation_sent = nil delegate_connection_identifiers end # Extract the action name from the passed data and process it via the channel. The process will ensure # that the action requested is a public method on the channel declared by the user (so not one of the callbacks # like #subscribed). def perform_action(data) action = extract_action(data) if processable_action?(action) payload = { channel_class: self.class.name, action: action, data: data } ActiveSupport::Notifications.instrument("perform_action.action_cable", payload) do dispatch_action(action, data) end else logger.error "Unable to process #{action_signature(action, data)}" end end # This method is called after subscription has been added to the connection # and confirms or rejects the subscription. def subscribe_to_channel run_callbacks :subscribe do subscribed end reject_subscription if subscription_rejected? ensure_confirmation_sent end # Called by the cable connection when it's cut, so the channel has a chance to cleanup with callbacks. # This method is not intended to be called directly by the user. Instead, overwrite the #unsubscribed callback. def unsubscribe_from_channel # :nodoc: run_callbacks :unsubscribe do unsubscribed end end private # Called once a consumer has become a subscriber of the channel. Usually the place to setup any streams # you want this channel to be sending to the subscriber. def subscribed # :doc: # Override in subclasses end # Called once a consumer has cut its cable connection. Can be used for cleaning up connections or marking # users as offline or the like. def unsubscribed # :doc: # Override in subclasses end # Transmit a hash of data to the subscriber. The hash will automatically be wrapped in a JSON envelope with # the proper channel identifier marked as the recipient. def transmit(data, via: nil) # :doc: logger.debug "#{self.class.name} transmitting #{data.inspect.truncate(300)}".tap { |m| m << " (via #{via})" if via } payload = { channel_class: self.class.name, data: data, via: via } ActiveSupport::Notifications.instrument("transmit.action_cable", payload) do connection.transmit identifier: @identifier, message: data end end def ensure_confirmation_sent # :doc: return if subscription_rejected? @defer_subscription_confirmation_counter.decrement transmit_subscription_confirmation unless defer_subscription_confirmation? end def defer_subscription_confirmation! # :doc: @defer_subscription_confirmation_counter.increment end def defer_subscription_confirmation? # :doc: @defer_subscription_confirmation_counter.value > 0 end def subscription_confirmation_sent? # :doc: @subscription_confirmation_sent end def reject # :doc: @reject_subscription = true end def subscription_rejected? # :doc: @reject_subscription end def delegate_connection_identifiers connection.identifiers.each do |identifier| define_singleton_method(identifier) do connection.send(identifier) end end end def extract_action(data) (data["action"].presence || :receive).to_sym end def processable_action?(action) self.class.action_methods.include?(action.to_s) unless subscription_rejected? end def dispatch_action(action, data) logger.info action_signature(action, data) if method(action).arity == 1 public_send action, data else public_send action end end def action_signature(action, data) "#{self.class.name}##{action}".tap do |signature| if (arguments = data.except("action")).any? signature << "(#{arguments.inspect})" end end end def transmit_subscription_confirmation unless subscription_confirmation_sent? logger.info "#{self.class.name} is transmitting the subscription confirmation" ActiveSupport::Notifications.instrument("transmit_subscription_confirmation.action_cable", channel_class: self.class.name) do connection.transmit identifier: @identifier, type: ActionCable::INTERNAL[:message_types][:confirmation] @subscription_confirmation_sent = true end end end def reject_subscription connection.subscriptions.remove_subscription self transmit_subscription_rejection end def transmit_subscription_rejection logger.info "#{self.class.name} is transmitting the subscription rejection" ActiveSupport::Notifications.instrument("transmit_subscription_rejection.action_cable", channel_class: self.class.name) do connection.transmit identifier: @identifier, type: ActionCable::INTERNAL[:message_types][:rejection] end end end end end