I am working on a node.js application that will connect to a UNIX socket (on a Linux machine) and facilitate communication between a web page and that socket. So far, I have been able to create socket and communicate back and forth with this code in my main app.js:
var net = require('net');
var fs = require('fs');
var socketPath = '/tmp/mysocket';
fs.stat(socketPath, function(err) {
if (!err) fs.unlinkSync(socketPath);
var unixServer = net.createServer(function(localSerialConnection) {
localSerialConnection.on('data', function(data) {
// data is a buffer from the socket
});
// write to socket with localSerialConnection.write()
});
unixServer.listen(socketPath);
});
This code causes node.js to create a UNIX socket at /tmp/mysocket
and I am getting good communication by testing with nc -U /tmp/mysocket
on the command line. However...
I want to establish a connection to an already existing UNIX socket from my node.js application. With my current code, if I create a socket from the command line (nc -Ul /tmp/mysocket
), then run my node.js application, there is no communication between the socket and my application (The 'connect' event is not fired from node.js server object).
Any tips on how to go about accomplishing this? My experiments with node.js function net.createSocket
instead of net.createServer
have so far failed and I'm not sure if that's even the right track.
The method you're looking for is net.createConnection(path)
:
var client = net.createConnection("/tmp/mysocket");
client.on("connect", function() {
... do something when you connect ...
});
client.on("data", function(data) {
... do stuff with the data ...
});