Django/PostgreSQL implementation of the Meteor DDP service.
Project description
Django/PostgreSQL implementation of the Meteor DDP service, allowing Meteor to subscribe to changes on Django models. Released under the MIT license.
Requirements
The core concept is that events are dispatched asynchronously to browsers using WebSockets and server-side using a PostgreSQL extension to the SQL syntax called NOTIFY (and its bretheren, LISTEN and UNLISTEN). You must be using PostgreSQL with psycopg2 in your Django project for django-ddp to work. There is no requirement on any asynchronous framework such as Reddis or crossbar.io as they are simply not needed given the asynchronous support provided by PostgreSQL with psycopg2. As an added bonus, events dispatched using NOTIFY in a transaction are only emitted if the transaction is successfully committed.
Scalability
All database queries to support DDP events are done once by the server instance that has made changes via the Django ORM. Django DDP multiplexes messages for active subscriptions, broadcasting an aggregated change message on channels specific to each Django model that has been published.
Peer servers subscribe to aggregate broadcast events which are de-multiplexed and dispatched to individual client connections. No additional database queries are required for de-multiplexing or dispatch by peer servers.
Limitations
No support for the SockJS XHR fallback protocol to support browsers that don’t have WebSockets (see http://caniuse.com/websockets for supported browsers). It is noteworthy that the only current browser listed that doesn’t support WebSockets is Opera Mini, which doesn’t support pages that use EcmaScript (JavaScript) for interactivity anyway. Offering SockJS XHR fallback wouldn’t help to substantially increase browser support: if Opera Mini is excluded then all current browser versions including IE, Edge, Firefox, Chrome, Safari, Opera, iOS Safari, Android Browser Android and Chrome for Android are supported. Having said all that, pull requests are welcome.
Changes must be made via the Django ORM as django-ddp uses Django signals to receive model save/update signals. There are no technical reasons why database triggers couldn’t be used - pull requests are welcome.
Installation
Install the latest release from pypi (recommended):
pip install django-ddp
Clone and use development version direct from GitHub (to test pre-release code):
pip install -e git+https://github.com/commoncode/django-ddp@develop#egg=django-ddp
Example usage
Add ‘dddp’ to your settings.INSTALLED_APPS:
# settings.py
...
INSTALLED_APPS = list(INSTALLED_APPS) + ['dddp']
If you’d like support for the Meteor Accounts package (ie: login/logout with django.contrib.auth) consult the section on authentication below and use the following line instead:
# settings.py
...
INSTALLED_APPS = list(INSTALLED_APPS) + ['dddp', 'dddp.accounts']
Add ddp.py to your Django application:
# bookstore/ddp.py
from dddp.api import API, Collection, Publication
from bookstore import models
class Book(Collection):
model = models.Book
class Author(Collection):
model = models.Author
class AllBooks(Publication):
queries = [
models.Author.objects.all(),
models.Book.objects.all(),
]
class BooksByAuthorEmail(Publication):
def get_queries(self, author_email):
return [
models.Author.objects.filter(
email=author_email,
),
models.Book.objects.filter(
author__email=author_email,
),
]
API.register(
[Book, Author, AllBooks, BooksByAuthorEmail]
)
Start the Django DDP service:
DJANGO_SETTINGS_MODULE=myproject.settings dddp
Using django-ddp as a secondary DDP connection (RAPID DEVELOPMENT)
Running in this manner allows rapid development through use of the hot code push features provided by Meteor.
Connect your Meteor application to the Django DDP service:
// bookstore.js
if (Meteor.isClient) {
// Connect to Django DDP service
Django = DDP.connect('http://'+window.location.hostname+':8000/');
// Create local collections for Django models received via DDP
Authors = new Mongo.Collection("bookstore.author", {connection: Django});
Books = new Mongo.Collection("bookstore.book", {connection: Django});
// Subscribe to all books by Janet Evanovich
Django.subscribe('BooksByAuthorEmail', 'janet@evanovich.com');
}
Start Meteor (from within your meteor application directory):
meteor
Using django-ddp as the primary DDP connection (RECOMMENDED)
If you’d prefer to not have two DDP connections (one to Meteor and one to django-ddp) you can set the DDP_DEFAULT_CONNECTION_URL environment variable to use the specified URL as the primary DDP connection in Meteor. When doing this, you won’t need to use DDP.connect(…) or specify {connection: Django} on your collections. Running with django-ddp as the primary connection is recommended, and indeed required if you wish to use dddp.accounts to provide authentication using django.contrib.auth to your meteor app.
DDP_DEFAULT_CONNECTION_URL=http://localhost:8000/ meteor
Serving your Meteor applications from django-ddp
First, you will need to build your meteor app into a directory (examples below assume target directory named myapp):
meteor build ../myapp
Then, add a MeteorView to your urls.py:
from dddp.views import MeteorView
urlpatterns = patterns(
url('^(?P<path>/.*)$', MeteorView.as_view(
json_path=os.path.join(
settings.PROJ_ROOT, 'myapp', 'bundle', 'star.json',
),
),
)
Adding API endpoints (server method definitions)
API endpoints can be added by calling register method of the dddp.api.API object from the ddp.py module of your Django app, on a subclass of dddp.api.APIMixin - both dddp.api.Collection and dddp.api.Publication are suitable, or you may define your own subclass of dddp.api.APIMixin. A good example of this can be seen in dddp/accounts/ddp.py in the source of django-ddp.
Authentication
Authentication is provided using the standard meteor accounts system, along with the accounts-secure package which turns off Meteor’s password hashing in favour of using TLS (HTTPS + WebSockets). This ensures strong protection for all data over the wire. Correctly using TLS/SSL also protects your site against man-in-the-middle and replay attacks - Meteor is vulnerable to both of these without using encryption.
Add dddp.accounts to your settings.INSTALLED_APPS as described in the example usage section above, then add tysonclugg:accounts-secure to your Meteor application (from within your meteor application directory):
meteor add tysonclugg:accounts-secure
Then follow the normal procedure to add login/logout views to your Meteor application.
Contributors
- Tyson Clugg
Author, conceptual design.
- Yan Le
Validate and bug fix dddp.accounts submodule.
- MEERQAT
Project sponsor - many thanks for allowing this to be released under an open source license!
- David Burles
Expert guidance on how DDP works in Meteor.
- Brenton Cleeland
Great conversations around how collections and publications can limit visibility of published documents to specific users.
- Muhammed Thanish
Making the DDP Test Suite available.
This project is forever grateful for the love, support and respect given by the awesome team at Common Code.
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