5

I have a node.js server using socket.io. The idea is to allow two different html files to communicate information to each other through this server. All was well with socket.io ver0.9.16 until ver 1.0 came out. Now, I receive a few errors on both the client and server side, the most apparent (to me, since I am new to this) is the ERR_NAME_NOT_RESOLVED error that I find when I start up the locally hosted server.js file and attempt to connect to it through the client html.

When I open the console in Google Chrome, I find this error which prints again to the console every second or so:

GET http://file/socket.io/?EIO=2&transport=polling&t=1406247171961-0 net::ERR_NAME_NOT_RESOLVED 

What follows are snippets of places where I may have problems in my html and server.js files as well as in a js file that is used by my html file to connect to the server.

index.html

I think this bit of code gets the socket.io client code from the localhost server. This is the first place where I may think that I have a problem

<script src="http://localhost:4000/socket.io/socket.io.js "></script> 

In addition, the following is where I import my index.js file which is used to connect to the server

<script type="text/javascript" src="scriptsTeacher.js" ></script>

-

server.js

This code (according to my sources) should set up a server on the localhost with port 4000 to which clients can connect and send/receive information

 var io;
 io = require('socket.io').listen(4000);
 io.on('connection', function(socket) 
 {   
    console.log("user connected");
 });

-

index.js

This code is used by the index.html which has it connect to a server listening on port 4000 using socket.io.

var socket = io.connect('localhost:4000');

-

Currently, there are two blatant errors that I can find. They are probably not the root of the problem, but they are as far as my limited debugging experience can take me.

  1. ERR_NAME_NOT_RESOLVED: (NOTE: I have looked at socket.io ERR_NAME_NOT_RESOLVED and it was not entirely useful since that user had a typo by using http:\\ instead of http://). As stated before, when opening index.html in Google Chrome and accessing the console, I receive multiple ERR_NAME_NOT_RESOLVED errors.

  2. There is no "Welcome to socket.io" message when accessing localhost:4000 I am certain that there should be such a message. Note that there is no 404 error, when I start up the server, I can access that webpage, but it is blank. If the server is not running, then I do get a "Webpage not found" message.

My question is this: Is there anything that I am not doing but should? As I said, I am new to this, and after some hunting around on the internet, I have a suspicion that there is some server (HTTP, Express, Express 3/4?) that I am not establishing. However, it is of note that the code worked as is in ver0.9.16 (using the .socket() and .listen() functions which were removed from my code for migration to ver1.0). If there is any information that is missing, I will do my best to provide it as soon as possible.

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I am using:
Macintosh OS 10.6.8
Google Chrome version 36.0.1985.125
socket.io ver1.0
node.js v0.10.29

4 Answers 4

8

The address in the error is wrong (assuming you haven't set up a local name resolver).

The address in the error begins with:

file

When it should begin with something like:

localhost:4000

The issue is probably in some of the js-config files for the web application (not the server). Or maybe you're trying to access the file locally (eg. just open the html-file in the browser) instead of typing the address localhost:4000.

1
  • 2
    Omfg, you made me realize I was loading my own file directly instead of though localhost. Jesus. Mar 19, 2016 at 19:23
1

I had the same problem that running file in the browser: eg. "file:///C:/apppath/index.html" Try running from the server eg. "http://your.app:4000/index.html"

1

I had the same issue - I wasn't able to connect to my socket.io server through my client on the same machine on mac. I disabled the firewall and it resolved the issue. I guess we could use xhr-polling instead and overcome this.

Vikram

0

I ran into a similar problem, but the solution to my problem had nothing to do with CORS. In my case, which is a Cordova 4.0.0 app using socket.io, I was using an incorrect URL for the socket server. I was using a socket server URL like this:

//socketserver.example.com:8000

This worked fine in the desktop Chrome browser, but in the Cordova webview on the phone or emulator there were many errors regarding failed GET and POST requests to a URL that started with

http://file/socket.io

The correct URL in my case turned out to be:

http://socketserver.example.com:8000 

Note the complete scheme at the beginning of the URL.

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