Publish and subscribe
Documentation of Meteor's publication and subscription API.
These functions control how Meteor servers publish sets of records andhow clients can subscribe to those sets.
Server
Meteor.publish(name, func)
import { Meteor } from 'meteor/meteor' (ddp-server/livedata_server.js, line 1518)
Publish a record set.
Arguments
- nameString or Object
If String, name of the record set. If Object, publications Dictionary of publish functions by name. If
null
, the set has no name, and the record set is automatically sent to all connected clients.funcFunction
- Function called on the server each time a client subscribes. Inside the function,
this
is the publish handler object, described below. If the client passed arguments tosubscribe
, the function is called with the same arguments.
To publish records to clients, call Meteor.publish
on the server withtwo parameters: the name of the record set, and a _publish function_that Meteor will call each time a client subscribes to the name.
Publish functions can return aCollection.Cursor
, in which case Meteorwill publish that cursor’s documents to each subscribed client. You canalso return an array of Collection.Cursor
s, in which case Meteor willpublish all of the cursors.
If you return multiple cursors in an array, they currently must all be fromdifferent collections. We hope to lift this restriction in a future release.
A client will see a document if the document is currently in the publishedrecord set of any of its subscriptions. If multiple publications publish adocument with the same _id
to the same collection the documents will bemerged for the client. If the values of any of the top level fieldsconflict, the resulting value will be one of the published values, chosenarbitrarily.
// Server: Publish the `Rooms` collection, minus secret info...
Meteor.publish('rooms', function () {
return Rooms.find({}, {
fields: { secretInfo: 0 }
});
});
// ...and publish secret info for rooms where the logged-in user is an admin. If
// the client subscribes to both publications, the records are merged together
// into the same documents in the `Rooms` collection. Note that currently object
// values are not recursively merged, so the fields that differ must be top
// level fields.
Meteor.publish('adminSecretInfo', function () {
return Rooms.find({ admin: this.userId }, {
fields: { secretInfo: 1 }
});
});
// Publish dependent documents and simulate joins.
Meteor.publish('roomAndMessages', function (roomId) {
check(roomId, String);
return [
Rooms.find({ _id: roomId }, {
fields: { secretInfo: 0 }
}),
Messages.find({ roomId })
];
});
Alternatively, a publish function can directly control its published record setby calling the functions added
(to add a new document to thepublished record set), changed
(to change or clear somefields on a document already in the published record set), andremoved
(to remove documents from the published recordset). These methods are provided by this
in your publish function.
If a publish function does not return a cursor or array of cursors, it isassumed to be using the low-level added
/changed
/removed
interface, and itmust also call ready
once the initial record set iscomplete.
Example (server):
// Publish the current size of a collection.
Meteor.publish('countsByRoom', function (roomId) {
check(roomId, String);
let count = 0;
let initializing = true;
// `observeChanges` only returns after the initial `added` callbacks have run.
// Until then, we don't want to send a lot of `changed` messages—hence
// tracking the `initializing` state.
const handle = Messages.find({ roomId }).observeChanges({
added: (id) => {
count += 1;
if (!initializing) {
this.changed('counts', roomId, { count });
}
},
removed: (id) => {
count -= 1;
this.changed('counts', roomId, { count });
}
// We don't care about `changed` events.
});
// Instead, we'll send one `added` message right after `observeChanges` has
// returned, and mark the subscription as ready.
initializing = false;
this.added('counts', roomId, { count });
this.ready();
// Stop observing the cursor when the client unsubscribes. Stopping a
// subscription automatically takes care of sending the client any `removed`
// messages.
this.onStop(() => handle.stop());
});
// Sometimes publish a query, sometimes publish nothing.
Meteor.publish('secretData', function () {
if (this.userId === 'superuser') {
return SecretData.find();
} else {
// Declare that no data is being published. If you leave this line out,
// Meteor will never consider the subscription ready because it thinks
// you're using the `added/changed/removed` interface where you have to
// explicitly call `this.ready`.
return [];
}
});
Example (client):
// Declare a collection to hold the count object.
const Counts = new Mongo.Collection('counts');
// Subscribe to the count for the current room.
Tracker.autorun(() => {
Meteor.subscribe('countsByRoom', Session.get('roomId'));
});
// Use the new collection.
const roomCount = Counts.findOne(Session.get('roomId')).count;
console.log(`Current room has ${roomCount} messages.`);
Meteor will emit a warning message if you call
Meteor.publish
in aproject that includes theautopublish
package. Your publish functionwill still work.
Read more about publications and how to use them in theData Loading article in the Meteor Guide.
Server
this.userId
(ddp-server/livedata_server.js, line 1006)
Access inside the publish function. The id of the logged-in user, or null
if no user is logged in.
This is constant. However, if the logged-in user changes, the publishfunction is rerun with the new value, assuming it didn’t throw an error at the previous run.
Server
this.added(collection, id, fields)
(ddp-server/livedata_server.js, line 1251)
Call inside the publish function. Informs the subscriber that a document has been added to the record set.
Arguments
- collectionString
The name of the collection that contains the new document.
idString
The new document's ID.
fieldsObject
- The fields in the new document. If
_id
is present it is ignored.
Server
this.changed(collection, id, fields)
(ddp-server/livedata_server.js, line 1274)
Call inside the publish function. Informs the subscriber that a document in the record set has been modified.
Arguments
- collectionString
The name of the collection that contains the changed document.
idString
The changed document's ID.
fieldsObject
- The fields in the document that have changed, together with their new values. If a field is not present in
fields
it was left unchanged; if it is present infields
and has a value ofundefined
it was removed from the document. If_id
is present it is ignored.
Server
this.removed(collection, id)
(ddp-server/livedata_server.js, line 1290)
Call inside the publish function. Informs the subscriber that a document has been removed from the record set.
Arguments
- collectionString
The name of the collection that the document has been removed from.
idString
- The ID of the document that has been removed.
Server
this.ready()
(ddp-server/livedata_server.js, line 1307)
Call inside the publish function. Informs the subscriber that an initial, complete snapshot of the record set has been sent. This will trigger a call on the client to the onReady
callback passed to Meteor.subscribe
, if any.
Server
this.onStop(func)
(ddp-server/livedata_server.js, line 1225)
Call inside the publish function. Registers a callback function to run when the subscription is stopped.
Arguments
- funcFunction
- The callback function
If you call observe
or observeChanges
in yourpublish handler, this is the place to stop the observes.
Server
this.error(error)
(ddp-server/livedata_server.js, line 1193)
Call inside the publish function. Stops this client's subscription, triggering a call on the client to the onStop
callback passed to Meteor.subscribe
, if any. If error
is not a Meteor.Error
, it will be sanitized.
Arguments
- errorError
- The error to pass to the client.
Server
this.stop()
(ddp-server/livedata_server.js, line 1211)
Call inside the publish function. Stops this client's subscription and invokes the client's onStop
callback with no error.
Server
this.connection
(ddp-server/livedata_server.js, line 964)
Access inside the publish function. The incoming connection for this subscription.
Client
Meteor.subscribe(name, [arg1, arg2…], [callbacks])
import { Meteor } from 'meteor/meteor' (ddp-client/common/livedata_connection.js, line 347)
Subscribe to a record set. Returns a handle that providesstop()
and ready()
methods.
Arguments
- nameString
Name of the subscription. Matches the name of theserver's
publish()
call.arg1, arg2…EJSON-able Object
Optional arguments passed to publisherfunction on server.
callbacksFunction or Object
- Optional. May include
onStop
andonReady
callbacks. If there is an error, it is passed as anargument toonStop
. If a function is passed instead of an object, itis interpreted as anonReady
callback.
When you subscribe to a record set, it tells the server to send records to theclient. The client stores these records in local Minimongocollections, with the same name as the collection
argument used in the publish handler’s added
,changed
, and removed
callbacks. Meteor will queue incoming records until you declare theMongo.Collection
on the client with the matchingcollection name.
// It's okay to subscribe (and possibly receive data) before declaring the
// client collection that will hold it. Assume 'allPlayers' publishes data from
// the server's 'players' collection.
Meteor.subscribe('allPlayers');
...
// The client queues incoming 'players' records until the collection is created:
const Players = new Mongo.Collection('players');
The client will see a document if the document is currently in the publishedrecord set of any of its subscriptions. If multiple publications publish adocument with the same _id
for the same collection the documents are merged forthe client. If the values of any of the top level fields conflict, the resultingvalue will be one of the published values, chosen arbitrarily.
Currently, when multiple subscriptions publish the same document only the toplevel fields are compared during the merge. This means that if the documentsinclude different sub-fields of the same top level field, not all of them willbe available on the client. We hope to lift this restriction in a future release.
The onReady
callback is called with no arguments when the server marks thesubscription as ready. The onStop
callback is called witha Meteor.Error
if the subscription fails or is terminated bythe server. If the subscription is stopped by calling stop
on the subscriptionhandle or inside the publication, onStop
is called with no arguments.
Meteor.subscribe
returns a subscription handle, which is an object with thefollowing properties:
- stop()
Cancel the subscription. This will typically result in the server directing theclient to remove the subscription’s data from the client’s cache.
ready()
True if the server has marked the subscription as ready. Areactive data source.
subscriptionId
- The
id
of the subscription this handle is for. When you runMeteor.subscribe
inside ofTracker.autorun
, the handles you get will always have the samesubscriptionId
field. You can use this to deduplicate subscription handlesif you are storing them in some data structure.
If you call Meteor.subscribe
within a reactive computation,for example usingTracker.autorun
, the subscription will automatically becancelled when the computation is invalidated or stopped; it is not necessaryto call stop
onsubscriptions made from inside autorun
. However, if the next iterationof your run function subscribes to the same record set (same name andparameters), Meteor is smart enough to skip a wastefulunsubscribe/resubscribe. For example:
Tracker.autorun(() => {
Meteor.subscribe('chat', { room: Session.get('currentRoom') });
Meteor.subscribe('privateMessages');
});
This subscribes you to the chat messages in the current room and to your privatemessages. When you change rooms by calling Session.set('currentRoom','newRoom')
, Meteor will subscribe to the new room’s chat messages,unsubscribe from the original room’s chat messages, and continue tostay subscribed to your private messages.