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I am learning web development and lately Meteor has caught my fancy.
I went through the starter tutorial of creating to-dos and use save button to commit the list to database. It allows everybody who opens the website to see the same to-dos list.
I added user log in system in to-dos so that people can login and see only their own to-do list.
Now, I'm trying to extend above example, for Collaborative to-dos.
Here is a sample use case:
My boss logs-in at do.com and starts creating his to-do list. While the Boss is logged in, I also happen to open do.com from my laptop and I see a message flashing - A session is already open. Do you want to collaborate with Boss? If I say 'Yes', Boss will be notified at his screen to allow me access to his list, and on granting access, I will be able to collaborate with Boss's to-do with both of our changes in the list reflecting on each other's screen but the final save/commit button remains frozen for me (because I came later) and remains active only for Boss. So, when Boss hits the save button, the list is committed to database with his and my changes.
If Boss chooses to not allow me to contribute, I get to see my own to-do.
On the other hand, if I choose NO, I get a fresh start at my to-do list with no bearing on already open sessions elsewhere.
The scenario should work other way round too. If I am the one who has an active session at do.com and Boss happens to open his own later, he should get the message whether he wants to collaborate with me and so on.
What would be the best way to implement this in Meteor? I came across this Persistent Session package which could be the solution but I am not able to adapt it to my use-case of allowing/denying another user via message/notification. Appreciate, any help on this. I'm a complete newbie here, pls excuse of any un-necessary verbiage, I wanted to explain my question well.
Thanks in advance.
Session is not the right tool for this, you want to use the server db (Collections) to mediate this collaboration.
Given that you created todo lists specific to users, I'm going to assume you have a publication somewhat like this:
Tasks = new Mongo.Collection("tasks");
if (Meteor.isServer) {
Meteor.publish("tasks", function () {
return Tasks.find({owner: this.userId});
});
}
So the next step is to change this so you can see your own tasks, and also those belonging to any user who shares their tasks with you. This could be created like this:
Tasks = new Mongo.Collection('tasks');
CanView = new Mongo.Collection('canView');
// CanView holds docs with this schema:
// {
// user: 'DzxiSdNxEhiHMaoi6',
// taskLists: ['DzxiSdNxEhiHMaoi6', '7X97ZhPxjX6J4eNWx']
// }
if (Meteor.isServer) {
Meteor.publish('tasks', function () {
var canView = CanView.findOne({user: this.userId}).taskLists;
return Tasks.find({owner: {$in: canView}});
});
}
On the client tasks could be displayed as one single list, or segregated by the owner property.
How you add and remove ids into the CanViews tasklist list will depend on the workflow for requesting access/offering to share, etc.
The other part of the workflow you mentioned is only the Boss being able to save the changes, but still have them reactively update on both screens. This would take more work as you would need to implement a 2 step process, with two collections on the server. i.e. Boss's (task owner's) saves are committed directly to the canonical Tasks collection, and other users saves to a second TaskUpdates Collection. Both published to the clients, which then have to overlay the data from TaskUpdates over the actual Tasks in a way that is clear and meaningful.
I am building a simple support chat for my website using Ajax. I would like to check if the user that I am currently chatting with left the browser.
At the moment I have build in that feature by setting interval function at customer side that creates the file with name: userId.txt
In the admin area I have created an interval function that checks if userId.txt exists. If it exists, it deletes it. If the file is not recreated by the custom interval function - next time the admin function will find out that file is not there it mark customer with this userId as inactive.
Abstract representation:
customer -> interval Ajax function -> php [if no file - create a new file]
admin -> interval Ajax function -> php [if file exists - delete the file] -> return state to Ajax function and do something
I was wondering if there is any better way to implement this feature that you can think of?
My solution is to use the jquery ready and beforeunload methods to trigger an ajax post request that will notify when the user arrives and leaves.
This solution is "light" because it only logs twice per user.
support.html
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
<head>
<script src="https://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/1.11.3/jquery.min.js"></script>
<script>
//log user that just arrived - Page loaded
$(document).ready(function() {
$.ajax({
type: 'POST',
url: 'log.php',
async:false,
data: {userlog:"userid arrived"}
});
});
//log user that is about to leave - window/tab will be closed.
$(window).bind('beforeunload', function(){
$.ajax({
type: 'POST',
url: 'log.php',
async:false,
data: {userlog:"userid left"}
});
});
</script>
</head>
<body>
<h2>Your support html code...</h2>
</body>
</html>
log.php
<?php
//code this script in a way that you get notified in real time
//in this case, I just log to a txt file
$userLog = $_POST['userlog'];
file_put_contents("userlog.txt", $userLog."\n", FILE_APPEND );
//userid arrived
//userid left
Notes:
1 - Tested on Chrome, FF and Opera. I don't have a mac so I couldn't test it on Safari but it should work too.
2 - I've tried the unload method but it wasn't as reliable as beforeunload.
3 - Setting async to false on the ajax request means that the statement you are calling has to complete before the next statement, this ensures that you'll get notified before the window/tab is closed.
#Gonzalon makes a good point but using a normal DB table or the filesystem for constantly updating user movement would be exhaustive to most hard disks. This would be a good reason for using shared memory functions in PHP.
You have to differentiate a bit between the original question "How do i check in real-time, if a user is logged in?" and "How can i make sure, if a user is still on the other side (in my chat)?".
For a "login system" i would suggest to work with PHP sessions.
For the "is user still there" question, i would suggest to update one field of the active session named LAST_ACTIVITY. It is necessary to write a timestamp with the last contact with the client into a store (database) and test whether that is older than X seconds.
I'm suggesting sessions, because you have not mentioned them in your question and it looks like you are creating the userID.txt file manually on each Ajax request, right? Thats not needed, unless working cookie and session-less is a development requirement.
Now, for the PHP sessions i would simply change the session handler (backend) to whatever scales for you and what makes requesting information easy.
By default PHP uses the session temp folder to create session files,
but you might change it, so that the underlying session handler becomes a mariadb database or memcache or rediska.
When the users sessions are stored into a database you can query them: "How many users are now logged in?", "Who is where?".
The answer for "How can I check in real time if a user is logged in?" is, when the user session is created and the user is successfully authenticated.
For real-time chat application there are a lot of technologies out there, from "php comet", "html5 eventsource" + "websockets" / "long polling" to "message queues", like RabbitMq/ActiveMq with publish/subscribe to specific channels.
If this is a simple or restricted environment, maybe a VPS, then you can still stick to your solution of intervalic Ajax requests. Each request might then update $_SESSION['LAST_ACTIVITY'] with a server-side timestamp. Referencing: https://stackoverflow.com/a/1270960/1163786
A modification to this idea would be to stop doing Ajax requests, when the mouse movement stops. If the user doesn't move the mouse on your page for say 10 minutes, you would stop updating the LAST_ACTIVITY timestamp. This would fix the problem of showing users who are idle as being online.
Another modification is to reduce the size of the "iam still here" REQUEST to the server by using small GET or HEADER requests. A short HEADER "ping" is often enough, instead of sending long messages or JSON via POST.
You might find a complete "How to create an Ajax Web Chat with PHP, jQuery" over here. They use a timeout of 15 seconds for the chat.
Part 1 http://tutorialzine.com/2010/10/ajax-web-chat-php-mysql/
Part 2 http://tutorialzine.com/2010/10/ajax-web-chat-css-jquery/
You can do it this way, but it'll be slow, inefficient, and probably highly insecure. Using a database would be a noticeable improvement, but even that wouldn't be particularly scalable, depending on how "real-time" you want this to be and how many conversations you want it to be able to handle simultaneously.
You'd be much better off using a NoSQL solution such as Redis for any actions that you'll need to run frequently (ie: "is user online" checks, storing short-term conversation updates, and checking for conversation updates at short intervals).
Then you'd use the database for more long-term tasks like storing user information and saving active conversations at regular intervals (maybe once per minute, for example).
Why Ajax and not Websockets? Surely a websocket would give you a considerably faster chat system, wouldn't require generating and checking a text file, would not involve a database lookup and you can tell instantly if the connection is dropped.
I would install the https://github.com/nrk/predis library. So at the time the user authenticates, It publishes a message to Redis server.
Then you can set-up a little node server on the back-end - something simple like:
var server = require('http').Server();
var io = require('socket.io')(server);
var Redis = require('ioredis');
var redis = new Redis();
var authenticatedUsers = [];
// Subscribe to the authenticatedUsers channel in Redis
redis.subscribe('authenticatedUsers');
// Logic for what to do when a message is received from Redis
redis.on('message', function(channel, message) {
authenticatedUsers.push(message);
io.emit('userAuthenticated', message);
});
// What happens when a client connects
io.on('connection', function(socket) {
console.log('connection', socket.id);
socket.on('disconnect', function(a) {
console.log('user disconnected', a);
});
});
server.listen(3000);
Far from complete, but something to get you started.
Alternatively, take a look at Firebase. https://www.firebase.com/ if you dont want to bother with the server-side
I would suggest using in built HTML5 session storage for this purpose. This is supported by all modern browsers so we will not face issues for the same.
This will help us to be efficient and quick to recognize if user is online. Whenever user moves mouse or presses keys update session storage with date and time. Check it periodically to see if it is empty or null and decide user left the site.
Depending on your resources you may opt for websockets or the previous method called long pool request. Both ensure a bidirectional communication between the server and the client. But they may be expensive on resources.
Here is an good tutorial on the websocket:
http://www.binarytides.com/websockets-php-tutorial/
I would use a callback that you (admin) can trigger. I use this technique in web app and mobile apps to (All this is set on the user side from the server):
Send a message to user (like: "behave or I ban you").
Update user status/location. (for events to know when attendants is arriving)
Terminate user connections (e.g. force log out if maintenance).
Set user report time (e.g. how often should the user report back)
The callback for the web app is usually in JavaScript, and you define when and how you want the user to call home. Think of it as a service channel.
Instead of creating and deleting files you can do the same thing with cookie benefits of using cookie are
You do not need to hit ajax request to create a file on server as cookies are accessible by javascript/jquery.
Cookies have an option to set the time interval so would automatically delete themselves after a time, so you will not need php script to delete that.
Cookies are accessible by php, so when ever you need to check if user is still active or not, you can simply check if the cookie exist
If it were aspnet I would say signalR... but for php perhaps you could look into Rachet it might help with a lot of what you are trying to accomplish as the messages could be pushed to the clients instead of client polling.
Imo, there is no need for setting up solutions with bidirectional communications. You only want to know if a user is still logged in or attached to the system. If I understand you right, you only need a communication from server to client. So you can try SSE (server sent events) for that. The link gives you an idea, how to implement this with PHP.
The idea is simple. The server knows if user is attached or not. He could send something like "hey, user xyz is still logged in" or "hey, user xzy seems not to be logged in any more" and the client only listens to that messages and can react to the messages (e.g. via JavaScript).
The advantage is: SSE is really good for realtime applications, because the server only has to send data and the client has only to listen, see also the specification for this.
If you really need bidirectional communications or can't go with the two dependencies mentioned in the specs, it's not the best decision to use SSE, of course.
Here is a late Update with a nice chat example (written in Java). Probably it's also good to get an idea how to implement this in PHP.
I have a mean.js server running that will allow a user to check their profile. I want to have a setInterval like process running every second, which based on a condition, retrieve data from another server and update the mongoDB (simple-polling / long-polling). This updates the values that the user sees as well.
Q : Is this event loop allowed on nodejs, if so, where does the logic go that would start the interval when the server starts? or can events only be caused by actions (eg, the user clicking their profile to view the data).
Q: What are the implications of having both ends reading and writing to the same DB? Will the collisions just overwrite each other or fault. Is there info on how much read/write would overload it?
I think you can safely do a mongoDB cronjob to update every x day/hour/minutes. In the case of user profile, I assume thats not a critical data which require you to update your DB in real time.
If you need to update in real time, then do a DB replication. Then you point it to a new DB thats replicated on a real time.
I have a small application where a users can drag and drop a task in an HTML table.
When user drops the task, I call a javascript function called update_task:
function update_task(user_id, task_id, status_id, text, uiDraggable, el) {
$.get('task_update.php?user_id='+user_id+'&task_id='+task_id+'&status_id='+status_id+'', function(data) {
try {
jsonResult = JSON.parse(data);
} catch (e) {
alert(data);
return;
};
In task_update.php I GET my values; user_id, task_id & status_id and execute a PDO UPDATE query, to update my DB. If the query executes correctly, I
echo json_encode ( array (
'success' => true
) );
And then I append the task to the correct table cell
if(typeof jsonResult.success != 'undefined') {
$(uiDraggable).detach().css({top: 0,left: 0}).appendTo(el);
}
This has all worked fine. But, I'm starting to realize, that it's a problem when 2 or more people are making changes at the same time. If I'm testing with 2 browsers, and has the site opened on both for example: Then, if I move a task on browser1, I would have to manually refresh the page at browser2 to see the changes.
So my question is; How can I make my application auto-detech if a change to the DB-table has been made? And how can I update the HTML table, without refreshing the page.
I have looked at some timed intervals for updating pages, but that wouldn't work for me, since I really don't want to force the browser to refresh. A user can for example also create a new task in a lightbox iframe, so it would be incredibly annoying for them, if their browser refreshed while they were trying to create a new task.
So yeah, what would be the best practice for me to use?
Use Redis and its publish/subscribe feature to implement a message bus between your PHP app and a lightweight websocket server (Node.js is a good choice for this).
When your PHP modifies the data, it also emits an event in Redis that some data has changed.
When a websocket client connects to the Node.js server, it tells the server what data it would like to monitor, then, as soon as a Redis event was received and the event's data matches the client's monitored data, notify the client over the websocket, which then would refresh the page.
Take a look at this question with answers explaining all of this in detail, includes sample code that you can reuse.
I would use ajax to check the server at a reasonable interval. What's reasonable depends on your project - it should be often enough that it changes on one end don't mess up what another user is doing.
If you're worried about this being resource intensive you could use APC to save last modified times for everything that's active - that way you don't have to hit the database when you're just checking if anything has changed.
When things have changed then you should use ajax for that as well, and add the changes directly in the page with javascript/jquery.
If you really need to check a db changes - write a database triggers.
But if nobody, except your code, change it - you can to implement some observation in your code.
Make Observation(EventListener) pattern imlementation, or use one of existed.
Trigger events when anything meaningful happened.
Subscribe to this events
I am trying to use periodic refresh(ajax)/polling on my site by XMLHttp(XHR) to check if a user has a new message on the database every 10 seconds, then if there is inform him/her by creating a div dynamically like this:
function shownotice() {
var divnotice = document.createElement("div");
var closelink = document.createElement("a");
closelink.onclick = this.close;
closelink.href = "#";
closelink.className = "close";
closelink.appendChild(document.createTextNode("close"));
divnotice.appendChild(closelink);
divnotice.className = "notifier";
divnotice.setAttribute("align", "center");
document.body.appendChild(divnotice);
divnotice.style.top = document.body.scrollTop + "px";
divnotice.style.left = document.body.scrollLeft + "px";
divnotice.style.display = "block";
request(divnotice);
}
Is this a reliable or stable way to check message specifically since when I look under firebug, a lot of request is going on to my database? Can this method make my database down because of too much request? Is there another way to do this since when I login to facebook and check under firebug, no request is happening or going on but I know they are using periodic refresh too... how do they do that?
You can check for new data every 10 seconds, but instead of checking the db, you need to do a lower impact check.
What I would do is modify the db update process so that when it makes a change to some data, it also updates the timestamp on a file to show that there is a recent change.
If you want better granularity than "something changed somewhere in the db" you can break it down by username (or some other identifier). The file(s) to be updated would then be the username for each user who might be interested in the update.
So, when you script asks the server if there is any information for user X newer than time t, instead of making a DB query, the server side script can just compare the timestamp of a file with the time parameter and see if there is anything new in the database.
In the process that is updating the DB, add code that (roughly) does:
foreach username interested in this update
{
touch the file \updates\username
}
Then your function to see if there is new data looks something like:
function NewDataForUser (string username, time t)
{
timestamp ts = GetLastUpdateTime("\updates\username");
return (ts > t);
}
Once you find that there is new data, you can then do a full blown DB query and get whatever information you need.
I left facebook open with firebug running and I'm seeing requests about once a minute, which seems like plenty to me.
The other approach, used by Comet, is to make a request and leave it open, with the server dribbling out data to the client without completing the response. This is a hack, and violates every principle of what HTTP is all about :). But it does work.
This is quite unreliable and probably far too taxing on the server in most cases.
Perhaps you should have a look into a push interface: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Push_technology
I've heard Comet is the most scalable solution.
I suspect Facebook uses a Flash movie (they always download one called SoundPlayerHater.swf) which they use to do some comms with their servers. This does not get caught by Firebug (might be by Fiddler though).
This is not a better approach. Because you ended up querying your server in every 10 seconds even there is no real updates.
Instead of this polling approach, you can simulate the server push (reverrse AJAX or COMET) approach. This will compeletly reduce the server workload and only the client is updated if there is an update in server side.
As per wikipedia
Reverse Ajax refers to an Ajax design
pattern that uses long-lived HTTP
connections to enable low-latency
communication between a web server and
a browser. Basically it is a way of
sending data from client to server and
a mechanism for pushing server data
back to the browser.
For more info, check out my other response to the similar question