exchange-protocol

Hypercore-extension that allows peers to exchange feed-descriptors

Usage no npm install needed!

<script type="module">
  import exchangeProtocol from 'https://cdn.skypack.dev/exchange-protocol';
</script>

README

exchange-protocol

Hypercore-extension that enables two peers to exchange feed keys and descriptors.

Following extension hosts are supported:

  • hypercore
  • hypercore-protocol
  • decentstack (built-in by default)

Take a look at exchange-protocol docs page for a higher level description and sequence diagrams.

Usage

Given the following manifest:

// Header-values are allowed to contain primitive types or Buffers
// if you want to use a custom encoder/decoder
const myManifest = [
  {
    key: 'deadbeefdeadbeefdeadbeefdeadbeef',
    headers: { seq: 1, hello: 'world' }
  },
  {
    key: otherKey,
    headers: { seq: 55, hello: 'planet', title: 'My awesome feed' }
  }
]

And given the following handlers Object:

const exchangeHandlers = {
  onmanifest (shared, accept) {
    shared.namespace    // => String - 'default'
    shared.feeds        // => Array<Object> - offered keys

    for (const feed of feeds) { // Print the manifest contents.
      console.log('Remote Shared feed:', feed.key.toString('hex'))
      console.log('Headers:', feed.headers, '\n')
    }

    // `accept` is a Function that directly responds to a given
    // manifest with `FeedRequest'
    const acceptedKeys = shared.feeds.filter(...).map(f => f.key)
    accept(acceptedKeys) // accept all keys

    // This is a stub, you should let your replication manager
    // take care of joining the other feeds into the feed stream.
    acceptedKeys.forEach(key => {
      coreStorage.get(key).replicate(true, { stream: myPeerStream })
    })
  },

  onrequest (req) {
    req.manifest_id // => Number - increment
    req.namespace   // => String - 'default'
    req.keys        // => Array  - requested keys

    // Another replication manager stub
    req.keys.forEach(key => {
      coreStorage.get(key).replicate(false, { stream: myPeerStream })
    })
  },

  onerror (err) {
    throw err
  }
}

Using hypercore-protocol

const Protocol = require('protocol')

const stream = new Protocol(true)
const ext = exchange(stream1, exchangeHandlers)

const key = Buffer.from('deadbeefdeadbeefdeadbeefdeadbeef', 'hex')

const channel = stream.open(key, {
  onopen () {
    ext.sendManifest('default', myManifest, ch1, (err, acceptedKeys) => {
      console.log('Remote peer selected', acceptedKeys)
    })
  }
})

Or using vanilla hypercore

const hypercore = require('hypercore')
const ram = require('random-access-memory')
const exchange = require('exchange-protocol')

const feed = hypercore(ram)

const ext = exchange(feed, exchangeHandlers)

feed.on('peer-open', peer => {
  // Arguments:  namespace, myManifest, target, callback
  ext.sendManifest('default', manifest, peer, (err, acceptedKeys) => {
    // Callback invoked on response from remote peer.
    // The `requestedKeys` are a copy of `req` param in `onrequest`,
    // they should be handeled in onrequest.
  })
})

Result In a real world scenario your peer would not be communicating with it self. But in this example, if we were to send myManifest to the exchangeHandlers the log lines would produce the following output:

> Remote shared feed: deadbeefdeadbeefdeadbeefdeadbeef
> Headers: { seq: 1, hello: 'world' }
>
> Remote shared feed: 1234feed43afdeafa41efeed4124beeb
> Headers: { seq: 55, hello: 'planet', title: 'My awesome feed' }
>

License

GNU GPLv3