I want to create a section in my site, where a user has a few simple update
buttons.
Each of these update
buttons will be going to the serv
3 years late, but here's a solution I came up with. Bonus: It works in IE7+
Uses:
The event table:
create table updates(
evt_id int unsigned not null auto_increment,
user_id int unsigned not null,
evt_type enum('start','update','finish') not null,
evt_msg varchar(255) not null,
primary key (evt_id)
)
The HTML:
<?php
include 'libconfig.php';
session_write_close();
if(count($_POST)){
$db=db_get_connection();
$stm=new PDOStatementWrapper(db_prepare($db,'INSERT INTO bupdates VALUES (:event_id,:user_id,:type,:message)'));
if($stm->run(array(
':event_id'=>0,
':user_id'=>App::user()->getId(),
':type'=>$_POST['type'],
':message'=>$_POST['message']
)))echo 'Inserted';
return;
}
?>
<!doctype html>
<html>
<head>
<title>tester</title>
<link rel=stylesheet href="s/jquery-ui-1.10.3.custom.min.css">
<script src="http://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/1.9.1/jquery.min.js"></script>
<script src="js/jquery-ui-1.10.3.custom.min.js"></script>
<script src="js/eventsource.js"></script>
<script src="js/json2.js"></script>
<script>
var MixerStatusMonitor=(function(){
var _src=null,
_handler={
onStart:function(e){
MixerStatus.setMax(parseInt(e.data));
},
onUpdate:function(e){
var data=JSON.parse(e.data);
MixerStatus.setValue(parseInt(data.progress));
MixerStatus.setStatus(data.message);
},
onFinish:function(e){
//var data=JSON.parse(e.data);
MixerStatus.hide();
_src.close();
}
};
return {
init:function(){
if(_src)_src.close();
_src=new EventSource('/daemon/updates.php?type=b');
_src.addEventListener('update',_handler.onUpdate,false);
_src.addEventListener('start',_handler.onStart,false);
_src.addEventListener('finish',_handler.onFinish,false);
MixerStatus.show();
}
};
})();
var MixerStatus=(function(){
var dialog=null,pbar=null,text=null;
return {
init:function(){
dialog=$('#buildStatus').dialog({autoOpen:false});
pbar=$('#buildStatus .progress').progressbar({value:false});
text=$('#buildStatus .text').progressbar();
},
setStatus:function(txt){
text.html(txt);
},
setMax:function(val){
pbar.progressbar('option','max',val);
},
setValue:function(val){
pbar.progressbar('option','value',val);
},
show:function(){
dialog.dialog('open');
},
hide:function(){
dialog.dialog('close');
}
};
})();
$(document).ready(function(){
MixerStatus.init();//build the UI
$('#updater').on('submit',function(){
$.ajax({
type:'post',
url:'test-updates.php',
data:$('#updater').serialize(),
beforeSend:function(){
if($('#updater select[name=type]').val()=='start'){
MixerStatusMonitor.init();
}
}
});
return false;
});
});
</script>
</head>
<body>
<p>Start event sets the max
<p>update event: {"progress":"","message":""}
<p>finish event: {"progress":"","message":""}
<form id=updater>
message: <input type=text name=message value="15"><br>
event type: <select name=type>
<option value=start>start</option>
<option value=update>update</option>
<option value=finish>finish</option>
</select><br>
<button>send message</button>
</form>
<div id=buildStatus title="Building">
<div class=text></div>
<div class=progress></div>
</div>
<div id=messages></div>
</body>
</html>
The PHP:
<?php
header('Content-Type: text/event-stream');
define('TYPE_BROADCAST','b');
define('MAX_FAILURES',30);//30 seconds
define('MAX_WAIT',30);//30 seconds
define('MAX_START_WAIT',6);//30 seconds
/*
* URL arguments:
* type
*/
include '../libconfig.php';
session_write_close();
if(!App::loggedIn() || !App::user()){
printEvent(0,'finish','Login session has expired.');
}
if($_GET['type']==TYPE_BROADCAST){//not needed;specific to the app I am creating
$db=db_get_connection();
$stm=new PDOStatementWrapper(db_prepare($db,'SELECT * FROM updates WHERE user_id=:user_id AND evt_id>:last_id'));
$args=array(':user_id'=>App::user()->getId(),':last_id'=>0);
$stm->bindParam(':user_id',$args[':user_id'],PDO::PARAM_INT);
$stm->bindParam(':last_id',$args[':last_id'],PDO::PARAM_INT);
$failures=0;
$nomsg=0;
if(!isset($_SERVER['HTTP_LAST_EVENT_ID'])){
$start=new PDOStatementWrapper(db_prepare($db,'SELECT * FROM updates WHERE user_id=:user_id ORDER BY evt_id DESC'));
$start->bindValue(':user_id',$args[':user_id'],PDO::PARAM_INT);
$startwait=0;
while(1){
if($startwait>MAX_START_WAIT){
printEvent(0,'finish','Timed out waiting for the process to start.');
return;
}
sleep(5);
$startwait++;
if(!$start->run()){
printEvent(0,'finish','DB error while getting the starting event.');
return;
}
while($start->loadNext()){
if($start->get('evt_type')=='finish')continue 2;
if($start->get('evt_type')=='start')break;
}
if($start->get('evt_type')=='start'){
$args[':last_id']=$start->get('evt_id');
printEvent($start->get('evt_id'),'start',$start->get('evt_msg'));
break;
}
}
}else
$args[':last_id']=$_SERVER['HTTP_LAST_EVENT_ID'];
if($args[':last_id']===0){
printEvent(0,'finish','ll');
exit;
}
while(1){
sleep(1);
if(!$stm->run()){
$failures++;
if($failures>MAX_FAILURES){
printEvent(0,'finish','Max failures reached.');
break;
}
}
if($stm->loadNext()){
$failures=0;
$nomsg=0;
do{
if($stm->get('evt_type')=='finish')break;
$args[':last_id']=$stm->get('evt_id');
printEvent($stm->get('evt_id'),$stm->get('evt_type'),$stm->get('evt_msg'));
}while($stm->loadNext());
if($stm->get('evt_type')=='finish'){
printEvent($args[':last_id'],'finish',$stm->get('evt_msg'));
break;
}
}else{
$nomsg++;
if($nomsg>MAX_WAIT){
exit;//TODO: test
}
}
}
}else{
printEvent(0,'close','Unknown event type.');
}
function printEvent($id,$name,$data){
echo "id: $id\nevent: $name\n";
if(is_array($data)){
foreach($data as $datum)
echo "data: $datum\n";
echo "\n";
}else
echo "data: $data\n\n";
flush();
if(isset($_SERVER['HTTP_X_REQUESTED_WITH']) &&
$_SERVER['HTTP_X_REQUESTED_WITH']=='XMLHttpRequest')exit;//ajax request. Need to kill the connection.
}
In case you were wondering about PDOStatementWrapper
the source for it is here. Sorry it doesn't include anything integrated with CodeIgniter.
It's pretty hard to get this right. What we've settled on for our system is a "faked" progress bar - it just animates over and over (which since it is an animated gif, you might expect!).
An alternative would be to submit to one script, and have that processing in the background (and outputting progress to a file) while making an Ajax request to another script whose only responsibility is to read that progress file and return how far through the process you are. This would work - it feels a little bit kludgy, but it would at least solve your immediate problem.
I know very little about Comet or the likes, so this is purely based on my current understanding.
I'm going to give you an example using WebSync On-Demand, but the same approach would work regardless of your choice of server.
Here's what you do. First, kick off the long-running operation somehow; your user clicks the button to start this process (I'm going to assume an Ajax call, but whatever works), and you return to them some sort of identifier, we'll call that 'myId', give it a value of '1'. Whether you do that by invoking a process of some sort, etc, is up to you.
Then, in your callback from that invocation, you would write something like so:
var myId = 1; // this would be set somewhere else
client.initialize('api key');
client.connect();
client.subscribe({
channel: '/tasks/' + myId,
onReceive: function(args){
// update the progress bar
myProgressBar.update(args.data.progress);
}
});
What that'll do is subscribe your client to receive notification about updates to the task, so all that's left is to push out the updates, which you'd do in whatever process is actually running the task. That would look like (in PHP, using the SDK):
$publisher = new Publisher(
"11111111-1111-1111-1111-111111111111", // your api key again
"mydomain.com" // your domain
);
// publish data
$response = $publisher->publish(array(
array(
'channel' => '/tasks/' . $myId, //comes from somewhere
'data' => (object) array(
'progress' => '45' //45% complete
)
)
));
// success if empty (no error)
$success = empty($response);
That's it; as updates occur, they'll push out to your client in real-time.