7.7 KiB
Receive and Send Messages Using Waku Relay With ReactJS
It is easy to use DappConnect with ReactJS. In this guide, we will demonstrate how your ReactJS dApp can use Waku Relay to send and receive messages.
Before starting, you need to choose a Content Topic for your dApp.
Check out the how to choose a content topic guide to learn more about content topics.
For this guide, we are using a single content topic: /min-js-web-chat/1/chat/proto
.
Setup
Create a new react app:
npx create-react-app min-js-web-chat
cd min-js-web-chat
Then, install js-waku:
npm install js-waku
Start the dev server and open the dApp in your browser:
npm run start
Note: We have noticed some issues with React bundling due to npm
pulling an old version of babel.
If you are getting an error about the optional chaining (?.)
character not being valid, try cleaning up and re-installing your dependencies:
rm -rf node_modules package-lock.json
npm install
Create Waku Instance
In order to interact with the Waku network, you first need a Waku instance.
Go to App.js
and modify the App
function:
import { Waku } from 'js-waku';
import * as React from 'react';
function App() {
const [waku, setWaku] = React.useState(undefined);
const [wakuStatus, setWakuStatus] = React.useState('None');
// Start Waku
React.useEffect(() => {
// If Waku is already assigned, the job is done
if (!!waku) return;
// If Waku status not None, it means we are already starting Waku
if (wakuStatus !== 'None') return;
setWakuStatus('Starting');
// Create Waku
Waku.create().then((waku) => {
// Once done, put it in the state
setWaku(waku);
// And update the status
setWakuStatus('Started');
});
}, [waku, wakuStatus]);
return (
<div className="App">
<header className="App-header">
// Display the status on the web page
<p>{wakuStatus}</p>
</header>
</div>
);
}
Connect to Other Peers
The Waku instance needs to connect to other peers to communicate with the network.
First, create bootstrapWaku
to connect to the Status fleet:
import { getStatusFleetNodes } from 'js-waku';
async function bootstrapWaku(waku) {
// Retrieve node addresses from https://fleets.status.im/
const nodes = await getStatusFleetNodes();
// Connect to the nodes
await Promise.all(nodes.map((addr) => waku.dial(addr)));
}
Then, bootstrap after Waku is created in the previous useEffect
block:
React.useEffect(() => {
if (!!waku) return;
if (wakuStatus !== 'None') return;
setWakuStatus('Starting');
Waku.create().then((waku) => {
setWaku(waku);
setWakuStatus('Connecting');
bootstrapWaku(waku).then(() => {
setWakuStatus('Ready');
});
});
}, [waku, wakuStatus]);
DappConnect will provide more discovery and bootstrap methods over time, or you can make your own.
Define Message Format
To define the Protobuf message format, use protons
npm install protons
Define SimpleChatMessage
with two fields: timestamp
and text
.
import protons from 'protons';
const proto = protons(`
message SimpleChatMessage {
uint64 timestamp = 1;
string text = 2;
}
`);
Send Messages
Create a function that takes the Waku instance and a message to send:
import { WakuMessage } from 'js-waku';
const ContentTopic = `/min-js-web-chat/1/chat/proto`;
async function sendMessage(message, timestamp, waku) {
const time = timestamp.getTime();
// Encode to protobuf
const payload = proto.SimpleChatMessage.encode({
timestamp: time,
text: message,
});
// Wrap in a Waku Message
const wakuMessage = await WakuMessage.fromBytes(payload, ContentTopic);
// Send over Waku Relay
await waku.relay.send(wakuMessage);
}
Then, add a button to the App
function:
function App() {
const [waku, setWaku] = React.useState(undefined);
const [wakuStatus, setWakuStatus] = React.useState('None');
// Using a counter just for the messages to be different
const [sendCounter, setSendCounter] = React.useState(0);
React.useEffect(() => {
// ... creates Waku
}, [waku, wakuStatus]);
const sendMessageOnClick = () => {
// Check Waku is started and connected first.
if (wakuStatus !== 'Ready') return;
sendMessage(`Here is message #${sendCounter}`, waku, new Date()).then(() =>
console.log('Message sent')
);
// For demonstration purposes.
setSendCounter(sendCounter + 1);
};
return (
<div className="App">
<header className="App-header">
<p>{wakuStatus}</p>
<button onClick={sendMessageOnClick} disabled={wakuStatus !== 'Ready'}> // Grey the button is Waku is not yet ready.
Send Message
</button>
</header>
</div>
);
}
Receive Messages
To process incoming messages, you need to register an observer on Waku Relay. First, you need to define the observer function.
You will need to remove the observer when the component unmount.
Hence, you need the reference to the function to remain the same.
For that, use React.useCallback
:
const processIncomingMessage = React.useCallback((wakuMessage) => {
// Empty message?
if (!wakuMessage.payload) return;
// Decode the protobuf payload
const { timestamp, text } = proto.SimpleChatMessage.decode(
wakuMessage.payload
);
const time = new Date();
time.setTime(timestamp);
// For now, just log new messages on the console
console.log(`message received at ${time.toString()}: ${text}`);
}, []);
Then, add this observer to Waku Relay. Do not forget to delete the observer is the component is being unmounted:
React.useEffect(() => {
if (!waku) return;
// Pass the content topic to only process messages related to your dApp
waku.relay.addObserver(processIncomingMessage, [ContentTopic]);
// `cleanUp` is called when the component is unmounted, see ReactJS doc.
return function cleanUp() {
waku.relay.deleteObserver(processIncomingMessage, [ContentTopic]);
};
}, [waku, wakuStatus, processIncomingMessage]);
Display Messages
The Waku work is now done. Your dApp is able to send and receive messages using Waku. For the sake of completeness, let's display received messages on the page.
First, add incoming messages to the state of the App
component:
function App() {
//...
const [messages, setMessages] = React.useState([]);
const processIncomingMessage = React.useCallback((wakuMessage) => {
if (!wakuMessage.payload) return;
const { text, timestamp } = proto.SimpleChatMessage.decode(
wakuMessage.payload
);
const time = new Date();
time.setTime(timestamp);
const message = { text, timestamp: time };
setMessages((currMessages) => {
return [message].concat(currMessages);
});
}, []);
// ...
}
Then, render the messages:
function App() {
// ...
return (
<div className="App">
<header className="App-header">
<p>{wakuStatus}</p>
<button onClick={sendMessageOnClick} disabled={wakuStatus !== 'Ready'}>
Send Message
</button>
<ul>
{messages.map((msg) => {
return (
<li>
<p>
{msg.timestamp.toString()}: {msg.text}
</p>
</li>
);
})}
</ul>
</header>
</div>
);
}
And Voilà! You should now be able to send and receive messages. Try out by opening the app from different browsers.
You can see the complete code in the Minimal JS Web Chat App.