Following the release of Socket.IO v3.0.0, the Redis Adapter was updated and a new release is out: 6.0.0
For reference, the Redis Adapter is used when broadcasting packets across a set of Socket.IO servers. It relies on Redis Pub/Sub mechanism.
More information about how it works: https://github.com/socketio/socket.io-redis/#how-does-it-work-under-the-hood
The release notes can be found here: https://github.com/socketio/socket.io-redis/releases/tag/6.0.0
Please note that the new release is not compatible with Socket.IO v2, and previous versions are not compatible with Socket.IO v3 (compatibility table).
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Notable changes#
All the requests (for inter-node communication) now return a Promise instead of accepting a callbackThe Redis Adapter exposes additional methods for managing sockets and rooms in a multi-node setup:
RedisAdapter.sockets()
: returns the list of Socket IDsRedisAdapter.allRooms()
: returns the list of all rooms.RedisAdapter.remoteJoin(id, room)
: make the socket join the roomRedisAdapter.remoteLeave(id, room)
: make the socket leave the roomRedisAdapter.remoteDisconnect(id, close)
: disconnect the socket with the given id
Those methods used to accept a callback argument, they will now return a Promise.
Before:
io.of('/').adapter.allRooms((err, rooms) => { console.log(rooms); // an array containing all rooms (across all nodes)});
After:
const rooms = await io.of('/').adapter.allRooms();console.log(rooms); // a Set containing all rooms (across all nodes)
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customHook and customRequest methods were removedThose methods will be replaced by a more intuitive API in a future iteration.