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SignalR Integration

It is already possible to follow the standard Microsoft tutorial to add SignalR to your application. However, ABP provides SignalR integration packages those simplify the integration and usage.

Installation

Server Side

It is suggested to use the ABP CLI to install this package.

Using the ABP CLI

Open a command line window in the folder of your project (.csproj file) and type the following command:

abp add-package Volo.Abp.AspNetCore.SignalR

You typically want to add this package to the web or API layer of your application, depending on your architecture.

If you haven't done it yet, you first need to install the ABP CLI. For other installation options, see the package description page.

Manual Installation

If you want to manually install;

  1. Add the Volo.Abp.AspNetCore.SignalR NuGet package to your project:

    Install-Package Volo.Abp.AspNetCore.SignalR
    

    Or use the Visual Studio NuGet package management UI to install it.

  2. Add the AbpAspNetCoreSignalRModule to the dependency list of your module:

[DependsOn(
    //...other dependencies
    typeof(AbpAspNetCoreSignalRModule) //Add the new module dependency
    )]
public class YourModule : AbpModule
{
}

You don't need to use the services.AddSignalR() and the app.UseEndpoints(...), it's done by the AbpAspNetCoreSignalRModule.

Client Side

Client side installation depends on your UI framework / client type.

ASP.NET Core MVC / Razor Pages UI

Run the following command in the root folder of your web project:

yarn add @abp/signalr

This requires to install yarn if you haven't install before.

This will add the @abp/signalr to the dependencies in the package.json of your project:

{
  ...
  "dependencies": {
    ...
    "@abp/signalr": "~2.7.0"
  }
}

Run the following ABP CLI command in the root folder of your web project:

abp install-libs

This will copy the SignalR JavaScript files into your project:

signal-js-file

Finally, add the following code to your page/view to include the signalr.js file

@section scripts {
    <abp-script type="typeof(SignalRBrowserScriptContributor)" />
}

It requires to add @using Volo.Abp.AspNetCore.Mvc.UI.Packages.SignalR to your page/view.

You could add the signalr.js file in a standard way. But using the SignalRBrowserScriptContributor has additional benefits. See the Client Side Package Management and Bundling & Minification documents for details.

That's all. you can use the SignalR JavaScript API in your page.

Other UI Frameworks / Clients

Please refer to Microsoft's documentation for other type of clients.

The ABP Integration

This section covers the additional benefits when you use the ABP integration packages.

Hub Route & Mapping

ABP automatically registers all the hubs to the dependency injection (as transient) and maps the hub endpoint. So, you don't have to use the app.UseEndpoints(...) to map your hubs. Hub route (URL) is determined conventionally based on your hub name.

Example:

public class MessagingHub : Hub
{
    //...
}

The hub route will be /signalr-hubs/messaging for the MessagingHub:

  • Adding a standard /signalr-hubs/ prefix
  • Continue with the kebab-case hub name, without the Hub suffix.

If you want to specify the route, you can use the HubRoute attribute:

[HubRoute("/my-messaging-hub")]
public class MessagingHub : Hub
{
    //...
}

AbpHub Base Classes

Instead of the standard Hub and Hub<T> classes, you can inherit from the AbpHub or AbpHub<T> which have useful base properties like CurrentUser.

Example:

public class MessagingHub : AbpHub
{
    public async Task SendMessage(string targetUserName, string message)
    {
        var currentUserName = CurrentUser.UserName; //Access to the current user info
        var txt = L["MyText"]; //Localization
    }
}

While you could inject the same properties into your hub constructor, this way simplifies your hub class.

Manual Registration / Mapping

ABP automatically registers all the hubs to the dependency injection as a transient service. If you want to disable auto dependency injection registration for your hub class, just add a DisableConventionalRegistration attribute. You can still register your hub class to dependency injection in the ConfigureServices method of your module if you like:

context.Services.AddTransient<MessagingHub>();

When you or ABP register the class to the dependency injection, it is automatically mapped to the endpoint route configuration just as described in the previous sections. You can use DisableAutoHubMap attribute if you want to manually map your hub class.

For manual mapping, you have two options:

  1. Use the AbpSignalROptions to add your map configuration (in the ConfigureServices method of your module), so ABP still performs the endpoint mapping for your hub:
Configure<AbpSignalROptions>(options =>
{
    options.Hubs.Add(
        new HubConfig(
            typeof(MessagingHub), //Hub type
            "/my-messaging/route", //Hub route (URL)
            hubOptions =>
            {
                //Additional options
                hubOptions.LongPolling.PollTimeout = TimeSpan.FromSeconds(30);
            }
        )
    );
});

This is a good way to provide additional SignalR options.

If you don't want to disable auto hub map, but still want to perform additional SignalR configuration, use the options.Hubs.AddOrUpdate(...) method:

Configure<AbpSignalROptions>(options =>
{
    options.Hubs.AddOrUpdate(
        typeof(MessagingHub), //Hub type
        config => //Additional configuration
        {
            config.RoutePattern = "/my-messaging-hub"; //override the default route
            config.ConfigureActions.Add(hubOptions =>
            {
                //Additional options
                hubOptions.LongPolling.PollTimeout = TimeSpan.FromSeconds(30);
            });
        }
    );
});

This is the way you can modify the options of a hub class defined in a depended module (where you don't have the source code access).

  1. Change app.UseConfiguredEndpoints in the OnApplicationInitialization method of your module as shown below (added a lambda method as the parameter).
app.UseConfiguredEndpoints(endpoints =>
{
    endpoints.MapHub<MessagingHub>("/my-messaging-hub", options =>
    {
        options.LongPolling.PollTimeout = TimeSpan.FromSeconds(30);
    });
});

UserIdProvider

ABP implements SignalR's IUserIdProvider interface to provide the current user id from the ICurrentUser service of the ABP (see the current user service), so it will be integrated to the authentication system of your application. The implementing class is the AbpSignalRUserIdProvider, if you want to change/override it.

Example Application

See the SignalR Integration Demo as a sample application. It has a simple Chat page to send messages between (authenticated) users.

signalr-demo-chat

Remarks

ABP doesn't change the SignalR. It works in your ABP based application just like any other ASP.NET Core application.

Refer to the Microsoft's documentation to host and scale your application, integrate to Azure or Redis backplane... etc.

See Also

Contributors


Last updated: July 31, 2024 Edit this page on GitHub

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