62

I finally got Socket.IO to work properly, but I have encountered a strange problem.

I am not sure if this is the best way, but I am using:

io.sockets.clients().length

This returns the number of clients connected to my server. The problem is after a few connects and disconnects of users, the number starts to stay higher than it should be.

For instance, if I connect and ask my friends to, the number goes up which is correct. But when we start to disconnect and reconnect the number does not decrease.

I am running the Node.js and Socket.IO server on a VMware Ubuntu server.

Why is this or is there a better method for finding out how many people are connected to the server?

4
  • I have dropped this for my projects in favor of Sock.js as it has better documentation and has much more development activity. Oct 8, 2015 at 10:20
  • not any more - last update a year ago
    – danday74
    Mar 22, 2019 at 23:36
  • 1
    Most of these answers are pretty old. I added an answer that is working for the latest version of Socket.io (as of April 2021 the latest is 4.0.1). Seems to me that all of the answers older than 2019 answers should get updated if possible. Apr 12, 2021 at 21:14
  • Why is it io.sockets.clients and not io.socket.clients (not a rhetorical question)? Jun 2, 2021 at 13:37

14 Answers 14

73

Just in case someone gets to this page while using socket.io version 1.0

You can get the connected clients count from

socketIO.engine.clientsCount

Need an answer and the above did not work for new version of socket.io

3
  • Does this suffer from any kind of bug like io.sockets.clients().length did/does? Dec 13, 2014 at 8:33
  • Didn't experience any
    – Ahmad
    Dec 29, 2014 at 9:48
  • Thanks. Socket.io 1.0 brought a lot of welcome changes but most of the information available online pertains to socket.io <1.0
    – nick
    Nov 18, 2015 at 16:53
57

There is a github issue for this. The problem is that whenever someone disconnects socket.io doesn't delete ( splice ) from the array, but simply sets the value to "null", so in fact you have a lot of null values in your array, which make your clients().length bigger than the connections you have in reality.

You have to manage a different way for counting your clients, e.g. something like

socket.on('connect', function() { connectCounter++; });
socket.on('disconnect', function() { connectCounter--; });

It's a mind buzz, why the people behind socket.io have left the things like that, but it is better explain in the github issue, which I posted as a link!

5
  • Thanks, that's a good idea I will try it out tonight. Couldn't one just splice themselves somehow? It sounds like a simple issue. Apr 23, 2012 at 7:40
  • 4
    Well it seems a bit difficult, since there are a lot of comments on github about this, the socket.clients() is used elsewhere in the script, so probably if they remove the client with splice it will damage other parts of socket.io Apr 23, 2012 at 7:44
  • 3
    Using this approach in the latest socket.io@^2.0.3 version, other methods din't work.
    – neelmeg
    Sep 30, 2017 at 5:33
  • 3
    I did this and I got -600. >__>
    – nikk wong
    Aug 23, 2018 at 23:28
  • refer to this answer , worked on june 2020
    – ego2509
    Jul 27, 2020 at 4:48
38

I have found the way to figure it out in version 1.3.7. There are three methods as follows:

  1. io.engine.clientsCount
  2. io.sockets.sockets.length
  3. Object.keys(io.sockets.connected).length

Hope these can help someone with the same issue.:)

4
  • 1
    PS. io is a instance of socket.io.Just like in my code:var io = require('socket.io')();
    – Lordran
    Oct 8, 2015 at 5:33
  • 9
    The second method no longer works in socket.io 1.4.5. The only similar alternative I can find is Object.keys(io.sockets.sockets).length.
    – Joseph238
    Mar 3, 2016 at 20:59
  • None of these methods work in the latest socket.io@^2.0.3 version.
    – neelmeg
    Sep 30, 2017 at 5:31
  • @neelmeg It has a big breaking changes after all :).
    – Lordran
    Oct 5, 2017 at 8:32
13

with socket.io 2.2.0 it's easier :

io.on('connection', function (socket) {
    console.log( socket.client.conn.server.clientsCount + " users connected" );
});

cheers

11

Tested using Socket.IO v2.3.0 using namespace, I found 4 locations having the clientCounts property (it's probably the same Server object each time):

const socketio = require('socket.io');
const io = socketio(http_server);

const io_namespace = io.of('/foobar');

io_namespace.on('connection', function(socket)
{
    console.log(socket.conn.server.clientsCount);
    console.log(socket.server.engine.clientsCount);
    console.log(io.engine.clientsCount);
    console.log(io_namespace.server.engine.clientsCount);
});
8

Why use an (implicit global) variable when you could always filter the array, that is returned by calling the clients() method.

io.sockets.clients().filter(c => !!c).length;

EDIT use shorter syntax

0
8

Connected Users count in number with socket.io version - 1.3.7

const io = require("socket.io");

io.on('connection', (socket) => {
    console.log(io.sockets.server.httpServer._connections);  //output in number
    // or
    console.log(io.sockets.server.engine.clientsCount);  //output in number
});
2
  • Could you add a little bit of an explanation? Your answer could potentially be much more useful for other users then. Aug 24, 2018 at 11:34
  • This works for me. Declare const count = io.sockets.server.engine.clientsCount; in both events, disconnect and connection separately. Mostly it wont works because after disconnected, count can not be updated again for the current active connections. Oct 3, 2022 at 13:45
6

After spending quite some time reading Stack Overflow posts and looking at socket objects many times, I found that to get the number of sockets that are connected, you need to do:

// io is the 'require'd socket.io module

io.on("connection", function (socket) {
  console.log("The number of connected sockets: " + socket.adapter.sids.size);
});

I've tested this very simple solution on [email protected].

1
  • 1
    Yes its about time now stackoverflow must enforce version tags, code tags and format the code in uniform format for that language. So many years have passed and now the world is in a version spagetti.
    – DragonFire
    Oct 27, 2021 at 4:11
5

I am currently using Socket.io v1.3.6 and have found that this works. It gives an accurate number when users connect and when they disconnect:

io.sockets.sockets.length

Like so:

var io = require('socket.io').listen(server);
io.on('connection', function(socket) {
  console.log(io.sockets.sockets.length);
  socket.on('disconnect', function() {
    console.log(io.sockets.sockets.length);
  });
});
3

Also take a look into:

io.sockets.manager.connected

It's a clean list of key value pairs (socket id and connection state?)

2
  • Hi @Gilnert-flamino, What If I have start same application in 2 tabs. I think it is showing 2 different connection. I have designed my application as single user logged in at a time, means If user open application in many tabs of one browser, I want just one count (because I have to show No. Of Online users) for logged in user. Do you have any idea to achieve this? May 12, 2014 at 11:08
  • 1
    Treating multiple tabs as one client requires sessions. Session data should be the same across all open tabs on all windows of a browser. This small library can give session data to your socket connections. Each tab/window will still get its Socket connection, but you can test if each Socket already has an active session in the "connection" event. (i.e. You cannot count online users by counting Sockets.)
    – kdbanman
    Jun 26, 2014 at 4:54
3

I'm using socket.io 0.9.10 and the following code to determine the number of sockets:

var socketIO =  require('socket.io').listen( .....
var numberOfSockets = Object.keys(socketIO.connected).length;

Not sure how accurate this number reacts to the various edge-cases, but 'til now it seems accurate: every browser connecting increases the number, every browser closed decreases it.

1
  • 1
    Unfortunately, that only works with a single server process. If you have multiple processes each using the same Redis store, this only decreases the counter on disconnect for the server process that personally witnessed the disconnect.
    – Eric Mill
    Nov 22, 2012 at 0:42
1

I am currently using socket v1.4.29 with typeScript, you can find the number of clients connected by using this

 io.sockets.on('connection', function(socket) {
 var clients = socket.client.conn.emit.length;
 console.log("clients: " + clients);
 });
1

I don't see any mention of multi core apps so I'm just gonna add that since I am using multiple cores ( clusters ) I wasn't able to get the right number of sockets consistently on the client side, so I ended up saving them to my mongo instance and it is quite consistent and accurate. With this approach I can view my socket connections in style via the browser :).

Mongoose schema :

var socketSchema = mongoose.Schema({
        socket : Number
});

Usage:

//reset to 0 when the app starts ( just in case )
SocketModel.find({ "socket" : 1 } , function(err, deadSockets ) {
    if (err){
        console.log( err );
    }
    else{
        for( var i = 0 ; i < deadSockets.length ; i++ ){
            deadSockets[i].remove();                
        }
    }
});

io.on('connection', function( socket ) {
    //I found I needed to make sure I had a socket object to get proper counts consistantly
    if( socket ){
        var socketEntry = new SocketModel({ "socket" : 1 });
        socketEntry.save( function(err ){
            if (err){
                console.log( err );
            }
            else{
        
            }
        });
    }
    //On Disconnect
    socket.on('disconnect', function() {
        SocketModel.findOne({ "socket" : 1} , function(err, deadSocket ) {
            if (err){
                console.log( err );
            }
            else{
                deadSocket.remove();
            }
        }); 
    });
});

How many do I have ?

SocketModel.count({ "socket" : 1 } , function(err, count ) {
    if (err){
        console.log(err);
    }
    else{
        var term = "sockets";
        if( count == 1 ) term = "socket";
        console.log("Current Load: " , count , term );
    }
}); 

NOTE I don't like using empty query objects ( {} ) so I just used { "socket" : 1 } as a dummy instead

3
  • I'm not sure I understand the question... this code is wrapped inside a cluster. I didn't think I needed to include that part of it
    – Squivo
    Oct 1, 2015 at 15:40
  • I'd like to know how to use clusters. Oct 2, 2015 at 6:17
  • Ahh I see ... well they are built into Node.js. The documentation to get started is here: nodejs.org/api/cluster.html. Getting a few clusters going with the cluster library is actually quite simple, but once you get into sharing data between clusters it gets complicated. Many folks end up using proxy services like nginx to manage sharing data between clusters and a session store like redis. There's many examples.
    – Squivo
    Oct 2, 2015 at 15:10
0

To return the total number of connected clients

console.log(io.engine.clientsCount)
1
  • What new information does this answer provide? Isn't this the same solution suggested in this post, which is currently the highest scoring? Nov 12, 2022 at 3:13

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