Downlinks

Version Note

This documentation describes Swim JS packages v4.0.0 or later. Users of earlier package versions may experience differences in behavior.

A Downlink provides a virtual bidirectional stream between the client and a lane of a remote Web Agent. WARP clients transparently multiplex all links to Web Agents on a given host over a single WebSocket connection.

Downlinks come in several flavors, depending on the WARP subprotocol to which they conform. A ValueDownlink synchronizes a value with a remote value lane. A MapDownlink implements the WARP map subprotocol to synchronize key-value state with a remote map lane. And an EventDownlink observes raw WARP events, and can be used to observe lanes of any kind.

This article will focus on the properties and methods which all types of downlinks have in common. Later articles on specific types of downlinks will go into detail on what is unique to each of them.

Before opening, a downlink must be addressed with the hostUri, nodeUri, and laneUri to which it should connect.

For an overview of Web Agents, lanes, and the general structure of a Swim application, visit SwimOS Concepts.

The simplest and most common way to address a downlink is to pass an options object with the hostUri, nodeUri, and laneUri during initialization.

import { WarpClient } from "@swim/client";

const client = new WarpClient();
// set address within the downlink
const hvacDownlink = client
  .downlink({
    hostUri: "warp://example.com",
    nodeUri: "/hotel/room/123",
    laneUri: "hvac",
  });

Additionally, all or part of a downlink’s address can be inherited from the WarpClient which is being used to open the downlink. This approach can be useful to avoid repeating oneself or when working with a large number of links.

const client = new WarpClient();
client.hostUri.set("warp://example.com");
client.nodeUri.set("/hotel/room/123");
// inherit hostUri and nodeUri defined on client
const lightingDownlink = client
  .downlink({
    laneUri: "lighting",
  });

Other Options

In addition to hostUri, nodeUri, and laneUri, there are a few other options available for customizing a downlink’s behavior.

The relinks option determines whether or not a downlink should be automatically reopened after a network failure; it defaults to true.

The syncs parameter determines whether or not a downlink should synchronize with the remote lane when opened; it defaults to true for stateful lanes. When set to true, a newly opened downlink will be sent the lane’s current state and will be subscribed to all future updates. When set to false, a downlink will receive future updates but will not be provided the lane’s state at the time of opening.

const client = new WarpClient();
const hvacDownlink = client
  .downlink({
    hostUri: "warp://example.com",
    nodeUri: "/hotel/room/123",
    laneUri: "hvac",
    relinks: true, // will automatically attempt to reconnect after a network failure
    syncs: false, // will not sychronize with remote lane state when opened; updates only
  });

The open method is used to open a downlink after it has been configured. The downlink is returned. Data will not begin streaming through the downlink until it has been opened. The close method closes a downlink.

const client = new WarpClient();
const downlink = client
  .downlink({
    hostUri: "warp://example.com",
    nodeUri: "/hotel/floor/1",
    laneUri: "status"
  })
  .open();

downlink.close();

Closing a downlink does not necessarily close the underlying WARP link. The WARP client will keep a link open so long as at least one downlink to a given node and lane URI remains open. This prevents application components from stepping on each other’s toes when they link to the same lanes of the same Web Agents. This can happen, for example, when a UI has a summary view and a detail view both display information derived from the same remote lane. The WARP link should not be closed when a detail view is hidden, if state updates are still required by the summary view. Events should also not be sent twice: once for the summary view, and once for the detail view. Neither the summary view nor the detail view should have to know about each other. And no global event dispatcher should be required, which could introduce consistency problems. WARP clients efficiently, and transparently, handle all of these cases on behalf of all downlinks.

A number of methods are made available for retrieving key pieces of a downlink’s state. Optional callbacks may also be registered for reacting to changes in these states or other key lifecycle events. Callbacks may be included in the options object passed when creating a downlink or set individually after a downlink has been initialized.

Connections

The connected method returns true if the underlying connection to the remote host is currently open. didConnect registers an observer callback that gets invoked whenever a successful connection is made. Likewise, didDisconnect and didClose register observer callbacks which gets invoked when a connection has ended. The difference between the two is that didDisconnect is triggered when the host severs the connection and didClose is triggered when the client initiates the disconnection.

Here is an example of a downlink being opened with some registered callbacks for listening to connection status.

const downlink = client.current.downlink({
  hostUri: "warp://example.com",
  nodeUri: "hotel/room/123",
  laneUri: "status",
  didConnect: () => { console.log("didConnect"); },
  didDisconnect: () => { console.log("didDisconnect"); },
  didClose: () => { console.log("didClose"); },
})
.open();

setTimeout(() => { downlink.close(); }, 1000);

/* Output:
  didConnect
  didClose */

Here is what the same example would look like if, instead of calling downlink.close(), the client began to experience network issues or if the host suddenly went offline.

const downlink = client.current.downlink({
  hostUri: "warp://example.com",
  nodeUri: "hotel/room/123",
  laneUri: "status",
  didConnect: () => { console.log("didConnect"); },
  didDisconnect: () => { console.log("didDisconnect"); },
  didClose: () => { console.log("didClose"); },
})
.open();

/* (some network issues) */

/* Output:
  didConnect
  didDisconnect */

In the case that a downlink attempts to connect with a node (web agent) or lane which does not exist, the behavior would be almost exactly the same as the example above. The output from the callbacks would be identical, the only difference being that the “@unlinked” WARP message received by the client would include an error tag.

// WARP message received after network connection issue
"@unlink(node:\"/hotel/room/123\",lane:status)"
// WARP message received after web agent not found
"@unlinked(node:\"/hotel/room/invalid_room_number\",lane:status)@nodeNotFound"
// WARP message received after lane not found
"@unlinked(node:\"/hotel/room/123\",lane:invalid_lane_name)@laneNotFound"

Linking and Syncing

The linked method returns true if the logical WARP link is currently open. Changes to the link’s state may be observed by registering callbacks with willLink or didLink.

The synced method returns true if the WARP link is currently synchronized with the state of the remote lane. Users may observe synchronization using the willSync and didSync methods.

willLink and willSync are both preemptive observers; they will be called regardless of the success or failure of the subsequent linking or syncing operations. Furthermore, because of the WARP messages the client sends to open a downlink, only one of either willLink or willSync will be invoked when a downlink is opened. Which observer gets called depends on the value of syncs. When the value of syncs is false, a WARP message with the “@link” tag is sent to the host; when syncs is true, a message with the “@sync” tag is sent instead. When the host receives a “@sync” WARP message it understands that it must perform all of the logic triggered by a “@link” message and, additionally, sync state between it and the new client.

Take this example of opening a simple ValueDownlink. Notice that syncs is set to false so we see “willLink” logged to output.

const downlink = client.current.downlinkValue({
  hostUri: "warp://example.com",
  nodeUri: "hotel/room/123",
  laneUri: "status",
  syncs: true,
  willLink: () => { console.log("willLink"); },
  didLink: () => { console.log("didLink"); },
  willSync: () => { console.log("willSync"); },
  didSync: () => { console.log("didSync"); },
  didSet: () => { console.log("didSet"); },
  didClose: () => { console.log("didClose"); },
})
.open();

setTimeout(() => { downlink.close(); }, 1000);

/* Output:
  willLink
  didLink
  didClose */

When syncs is set to true, “didSync” appears and “willSyncs” replaces “willLink”.

const downlink = client.current.downlinkValue({
  hostUri: "warp://example.com",
  nodeUri: "hotel/room/123",
  laneUri: "status",
  syncs: true,
  willLink: () => { console.log("willLink"); },
  didLink: () => { console.log("didLink"); },
  willSync: () => { console.log("willSync"); },
  didSync: () => { console.log("didSync"); },
  didSet: () => { console.log("didSet"); },
  didClose: () => { console.log("didClose"); },
})
.open();

setTimeout(() => { downlink.close(); }, 1000);

/* Output:
  willSync
  didLink
  didSet
  didSync
  didClose */

Notice the callbacks registered for didLink and didSync both always get called (assuming the link opened successfulfully). This is because the host sends back a separate message after each of these events occur. In the second example, we also see “didSet” appear in the output. didSet is called each time a ValueDownlink receives an update to the value shared between the client and host. When syncs is set to true, we will always receive at least the initial value, assuring didSet gets called at least once. When syncs is set to false, this is not guaranteed. We’ll cover all of this in more detail later in the valueDownlinks article.

The opened method returns true if the downlink has been opened. This is not necessarily always the same value as linked. Providing a downlink with an invalid hostUri, for example, could result in opened returning true and linked returning false.

Authentication

The authenticated method returns true if the underlying connection to the remote host is currently authenticated.

Bidirectional Communication

And finally, all downlinks support registering onEvent and onCommand callbacks.

The onCommand method accepts a callback used for observing outgoing command messages.

The onEvent method registers a callback for observing all incoming events. onEvent is the rawest form of handling WARP messages. In most cases, users will be better off handling incoming updates with specialized observer callbacks defined on downlink subtypes. Specialized downlink subtypes provide better context about the type of message being received, allowing us to handle them more appropriately. More on this in later sections.