This is a simple porting of socket.io-java-client that allows us to use a maven
repository and Google's json parser
instead of org.json.JSONObject
<!-- in the 'repositories' section -->
<repository>
<id>keytwo.net</id>
<name>Keytwo.net Repository</name>
<url>http://audiobox.keytwo.net</url>
</repository>
<!-- in the 'dependencies' section -->
<dependency>
<groupId>io.socket</groupId>
<artifactId>socket.io-client</artifactId>
<version>0.2.1</version> <!-- the desidered version -->
</dependency>
socket.io-java-client is an easy to use implementation of socket.io for Java.
It uses Weberknecht as transport backend, but it's easy to write your own transport. See description below. An XHR-Transport is included, too. But it's not functional in its current state.
The API is inspired by java-socket.io.client.
Features:
- transparent reconnecting - The API cares about re-establishing the connection to the server when the transport is interrupted.
- easy to use API - implement an interface, instantiate a class - you're done.
- output buffer - send data while the transport is still connecting. No problem, socket.io-java-client handles that.
- meaningful exceptions - If something goes wrong, SocketIO tries to throw meaningful exceptions with hints for fixing.
Status: Connecting with Websocket is production ready. XHR is in beta.
Using socket.io-java-client is quite simple. But lets see:
SocketIO socket = new SocketIO("http://127.0.0.1:3001/");
socket.connect(new IOCallback() {
@Override
public void onMessage(JSONObject json, IOAcknowledge ack) {
try {
System.out.println("Server said:" + json.toString(2));
} catch (JSONException e) {
e.printStackTrace();
}
}
@Override
public void onMessage(String data, IOAcknowledge ack) {
System.out.println("Server said: " + data);
}
@Override
public void onError(SocketIOException socketIOException) {
System.out.println("an Error occured");
socketIOException.printStackTrace();
}
@Override
public void onDisconnect() {
System.out.println("Connection terminated.");
}
@Override
public void onConnect() {
System.out.println("Connection established");
}
@Override
public void on(String event, IOAcknowledge ack, Object... args) {
System.out.println("Server triggered event '" + event + "'");
}
});
// This line is cached until the connection is establisched.
socket.send("Hello Server!");
For further informations, read the Javadoc.
-
with git
git clone git://github.com/Gottox/socket.io-java-client.git
-
with mercurial
hg clone https://bitbucket.org/Gottox/socket.io-java-client
Both repositories are synchronized and up to date.
to build a jar-file:
cd $PATH_TO_SOCKETIO_JAVA
ant jar
ls jar/socketio.jar
You'll find the socket.io-jar in jar/socketio.jar
Please report any bugs feature requests to the Github issue tracker
This Library was designed with portability in mind.
- Android is fully supported.
- JRE is fully supported.
- GWT does not work at the moment, but a port would be possible.
- JavaME untested.
- ... is there anything else out there?
There comes a JUnit test suite with socket.io-java-client. Currently it's tested with Eclipse.
You need node installed in PATH.
- open the project with eclipse
- open tests/io.socket/AllTests.java
- run it as JUnit4 test.
- Socket.io needs more unit-tests.
- XhrTransport needs to pass all tests.
- If websockets are failing (due to proxy servers e.g.), use XHR automaticly instead.
This library is distributed under MIT Licence.
You'll find further documentation at the Socket.io-java-client Github Wiki