1

Normally, when I send some JSON from one client to another, it works fine. But if there is only one client, it still sends packets. My solution was to (on the server-side, in node.js):

var clients = io.sockets.clients();

if(clients.length > 1){
// send stuff to other client
}

But when I do that, something extraordinarily strange occurs. I'll open up a client, start instigating the actions during the if statement, and the console, which prints the JSON before sending it, does nothing, because there is only one client. When I open up another client and instigate the actions during the if statement, the console will print out the JSON and send it to my other client. However, if I go over to my first client that I opened and instigate the actions in the if statement, the console won't print anything out, and it won't send anything. Why? I tried changing the if statement to say:

if("hello" === "hello"){
// do the same stuff as before
}

and both clients could send JSON to one another, but because I had changed the if statement, with one client open I would still send useless packets. For obvious reasons, the optimal situation would be if it wouldn't send packets with one client, but would send packets properly with more than one.

I hope that was clear, I'm sorry if that wasn't.

If I need to, I'll post more code.

EDIT:

Here is the code that updates the array:

var clients = io.sockets.clients();

io.sockets.on("connection", function (socket) {
clients.length++;
socket.on("disconnect", function() {
clients.length--;
console.log(clients.length + " clients are connected");
});
console.log(clients.length + " clients are connected");
});
1
  • but this only happens if I open up the first client once. to clarify, if you refresh the first client after opening the second client, then it will be fixed
    – Matt
    Apr 22, 2012 at 6:04

3 Answers 3

0

Haven't done any note.js lately, maybe this is bogus. But I thought: maybe the clients variable is defined for each client when he connects, and not updated later on. This seems the logic thing to me. I think that what you need to do is: fire an event to all clients when a new client connects, and update the "clients" variable.

3
  • I think @freakishs answer makes more sense than mine. I was thinking of separate instances of the clients var, but there's only one instance, probably. Apr 22, 2012 at 11:05
  • there is only one instance, because it's all on the server, but his answer doesn't work, sadly. I think it has to do with the if statement.
    – Matt
    Apr 22, 2012 at 18:47
  • I figured. There are systems that do attempt to keep a set of data for each user though, old versions of ASP for example, that's why I thought it might have been relevant. But nodejs is obviously way too cool for such silliness. Apr 22, 2012 at 19:47
0

I'm not sure how your code works (what's this: clients.length++ ?? Incrementation of array's length??) but try doing this the "normal" way:

var clients;

io.sockets.on("connection", function (socket) {
  clients = io.sockets.clients();
  socket.on("disconnect", function() {
      clients = io.sockets.clients();
      console.log(clients.length + " clients are connected");
  });
  console.log(clients.length + " clients are connected");
});

or even better (without holding global reference to connected users):

function get_clients() {
  var clients = io.sockets.clients();
  console.log(clients.length + " clients are connected");
}

io.sockets.on("connection", function (socket) {
  socket.on("disconnect", function() {
    get_clients();
  });
  get_clients();
});

Because io.sockets.clients() returns the array of all connected clients at the moment of calling it (perhaps that's why you get this strange behaviour).

7
  • yes, but when I put that in the if statement, I still had that problem :(
    – Matt
    Apr 22, 2012 at 18:22
  • Can you make each client request the value of io.sockets.clients().length when a new client connects? That might help to make sure the server is working with the correct numbers. Apr 22, 2012 at 19:49
  • @Matt Can you write down exactly how you use if statement?
    – freakish
    Apr 22, 2012 at 19:57
  • I say "if (clients.length > 1) { // send data to other clients }" I isolated the problem, and it's definitely the if statement. It's nothing fancy, just simple emit and on events within the if statement
    – Matt
    Apr 22, 2012 at 20:41
  • @Matt But what is clients and where you define it? It seems that you hold the reference to clients defined on connection event. But in this scenario each user sees clients connected only before him. You need to define clients variable on every event.
    – freakish
    Apr 22, 2012 at 20:44
0

Not sure if you only use pure JS, but if you coding in React and TS, you might put "connection" and "disconnect" into an useEffect

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