Elixir Phoenix PubSub Tutorial
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Prerequisites
You should know how to launch a 1 page Live View app that lets the user submit data via a form. The form data should print to the page.
This tutorial explains the basics of building a Phoenix PubSub chat app.
The goal of this writing is to explain how to write code used to build PubSub applications in Phoenix. I tried to write examples that keep code writing to a minimum. I believe minimalist examples are the best approach toward comprehension.
The tutorial is divided into three parts, each part building on the completion of the previous one.
Project Description
- Part 1: We create a two route live view app with each route assigned its own page. The two routes are /send and /receive.
The page at /send contains an html form and form submission code. When data is submitted, the /receive page receives the data, and renders it to its page. The code we write for this exercise uses pubsub functions to connect the two LiveView pages.
When complete, you will have two browser tabs open, one opened to /send and one opened to /receive. The /send route sends data to /receive and you view the update in real time.
- Part 2: We convert the previous app into a single LiveView page that performs both actions on a single route. The end result is the creation of a single page chat application containing real time updates that you view across browser tabs.
- Part 3: We write code to update your single page app to store chat data in a database.
Part 1
Setup
To begin we will start with an new Phoenix instance. In your terminal create a new phoenix app by typing:
mix phx.new app
When the console prompts you to Fetch and install dependencies, choose yes.
When you see the following instructions configure your database, run mix ecto.create.
We are almost there! The following steps are missing: $ cd app Then configure your database in config/dev.exs and run: $ mix ecto.create Start your Phoenix app with: $ mix phx.server You can also run your app inside IEx (Interactive Elixir) as: $ iex -S mix phx.server
If you are new to Elixir and are having trouble with database setup, please fix those issues before proceeding with this tutorial.
When the app is created, open your web browser to localhost:4000. The app will launch. If it doesn't, fix the errors before moving forward.
Create Routes
Go to the router and update it as shown.
directory: app/app_web/router.ex
scope "/", AppWeb do pipe_through :browser live "/send", SendLive, :home live "/receive", ReceiveLive, :home get "/", PageController, :home end
Create the LiveView Pages
Create a new folder named live in this directory: App/lib/app_web. The end result will look like this: App/lib/app_web/live.
In the live directory, create two files and name them send_live.ex and receive_live.ex.
Edit Send Live.ex
Open the file send_live.ex in your text editor. Paste the following code into it.
defmodule AppWeb.SendLive do use AppWeb, :live_view def mount(_params, _session, socket) do {:ok, socket} end def handle_event("send", %{"text" => text}, socket) do IO.inspect text Phoenix.PubSub.broadcast(App.PubSub, "message", {:text_stuff, text}) {:noreply, socket} end defp topic do #Topic "message" end def render(assigns)do ~H""" <div> <h1>Send Message</h1> <form phx-submit="send"> <input type="text" name="text" /> <button type="submit">Send</button> </form> </div> """ end end
Open receive_live.ex and copy the following code to it.
defmodule AppWeb.ReceiveLive do use AppWeb, :live_view def mount(_params, _session, socket) do if connected?(socket) do Phoenix.PubSub.subscribe(App.PubSub, topic) end {:ok, assign(socket, message_item: "")} end def handle_info({:text_stuff, text}, socket) do {:noreply, assign(socket, message_item: text)} end defp topic do # Topic "message" end def render(assigns)do ~H""" <div> <h1>ChatLive</h1> <%= @message_item %> </div> """ end end
Before learning how this code works, first launch the server and open up two browser tabs. Set one to /send and the other to /receive
Submit data from /send and view the result on /receive
Play with the code and explore it. Ensure that it works.
Description
Before explaining the code, I would like to summarize what I think is the important parts applicable to any PubSub application. To do so, I want to direct your attention to three functions. You can look at these functions as the main characters in the program.
- Phoenix.PubSub.broadcast(App.PubSub, topic, {:text_stuff, text})
- Phoenix.PubSub.subscribe(App.PubSub, topic)
- handle_info({:text_stuff, text}, socket)
For brevity I refer to these as broadcast,subscribe and handle_info.
All PubSub applications are composed of these three functions.
How Do I Connect Them ?
The broadcast function is connected to the subscribe function via its first and second arguments. These are both the same.
When you use the subscribe function in a module that modules handle_info function automatically listens for data sent by the broadcast function that matches the data in the 3rd argument of the broadcast function.
So in short
Explanation
1. In SendLive the code Phoenix.PubSub.broadcast is used to broadcast a message. This method takes three arguments.
- The pubsub type
- The topic
- The payload (the data you want to send to all listeners)
The pubsub type is always going to be the name of your app dot app. For our purposes you can treat this as boiler plate code. The topic is a string that represents a connection