Client Installation
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CompatibilitySocket.IO does support IE9 and above. IE 6/7/8 are not supported anymore.
Browser compatibility is tested thanks to the awesome Sauce Labs platform:
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Release notesThe release notes of each version can be found in GitHub.
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Installation#
Standalone buildBy default, the Socket.IO server exposes a client bundle at /socket.io/socket.io.js
.
io
will be registered as a global variable:
<script src="/socket.io/socket.io.js"></script><script> const socket = io();</script>
If you don't need this (see other options below), you can disable the functionality on the server side:
const io = require('socket.io')({ serveClient: false});
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From a CDNYou can also include the client bundle from a CDN:
<script src="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/socket.io/2.3.0/socket.io.js"></script>
Socket.IO is also available from other CDN like jsDelivr and unpkg.
There are several bundles available:
Name | Size | Description |
---|---|---|
socket.io.js | 19.8 kB min+gzip | Production version, with debug |
socket.io.slim.js | 15.6 kB min+gzip | Production version, without debug |
socket.io.dev.js | 38.5 kB gzip | Unminified version, with debug |
The debug package allows to print debug information to the console. You can find more information here.
During development, we recommend to use the socket.io.dev.js
bundle. By setting localStorage.debug = 'socket.io-client:socket'
, any event received by the client will be printed to the console.
For production, please use the socket.io.slim.js
bundle, which is an optimized build excluding the debug package.
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From NPMThe Socket.IO client is compatible with bundlers like webpack or browserify.
$ npm install socket.io-client
The client can also be run from Node.js.
Note: for the reasons cited above, you may want to exclude debug from your browser bundle. With webpack, you can use webpack-remove-debug.