Reputation: 6276
I have an existing PHP application, to which I need to add realtime notifications. In order to achieve this I have installed node.js (intending to add socket.io for all real time functionality)
However. Despite spending the last three hours researching and trying to get my head around how to integrate the two, I have found myself no closer to gaining an understanding.
I am currently using the following:
I have code already written which sends an event from the client to PHP and inserts a notification into the database. When the recipient refreshes their page they of course see the notification. I simply need node.js to handle the real time pushing to the client but am at a loss as to how to go about setting it up.
What I really need to know, given this scenario, is the following:
Ultimately I would like to simply be able to run a PHP function and expect node.js/socket.io/websockets to push the notification to the client. I just have no idea how to get there.
Thanks in advance for any examples/information/guides.
Upvotes: 20
Views: 8036
Reputation: 5951
This question is old but I found it when I was trying to implement websockets so maybe this will help someone else who needs a pure PHP solution which can be integrated into an existing project without too much hacking around.
Only requirement is the zmq binding for PHP, which is used as the method to pass data from your PHP scripts to your websocket server. If your PHP instance isn't built with it then you can find it here
Github repo is here, plenty of examples to get you going are here
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 163468
What I would do in this scenario is set up a Node.js server with Socket.IO. This gives you a cross-browser method for sending near-real-time data to clients.
When the client loads your PHP page, you will have a <script>
tag pointing at your Node.js server to load Socket.IO. Once loaded, the Socket.IO JavaScript client will connect to your Node.js Socket.IO server and wait for events to be emitted.
Now, since you want these events to be sent from PHP, you need a communication channel between your PHP application and Node.js. I recommend using Redis pub/sub for this. Basically, your PHP application publishes a message, and your Node.js servers that have subscribed to it will receive it. Those servers can then immediately pass a message on to the client to go get more data from PHP. (I think you will find though that it might be just as easy to have your Node.js server just send that data in the first place.)
You can put Node.js behind your Nginx server if you want, but you need the latest and greatest version for true web socket support.
Upvotes: 17