Skip to content

⚛ Use WebRTC in Node.js via a hidden Electron process

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

abelab/electron-webrtc

 
 

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 

History

95 Commits
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

electron-webrtc

npm version Build Status Dependency Status

Use WebRTC in Node.js via a hidden Electron process

WebRTC is a powerful web API that lets browsers make peer-to-peer connections, and has already been deployed in many popular browsers. It may sometimes be useful to let Node.js programs use WebRTC, e.g. in webtorrent-hybrid. However, the modules for WebRTC in Node (node-webrtc and node-rtc-peer-connection) are either hard to install, broken, or incomplete.

As a hack, this module talks to an invisible Electron instance in the background (using electron-eval) to use Chromium's built-in WebRTC implementation.

Status

This module is compatible with simple-peer and passes its tests.

electron-webrtc is intended for use with RTCDataChannels, so the MediaStream API is not supported.

Usage

npm install electron-webrtc

// call exported function to create Electron process
var wrtc = require('electron-webrtc')()

// handle errors that may occur when trying to communicate with Electron
wrtc.on('error', function (err) { console.log(err) })

// uses the same API as the `wrtc` package
var pc = new wrtc.RTCPeerConnection(config)

// compatible with `simple-peer`
var peer = new SimplePeer({
  initiator: true,
  wrtc: wrtc
})

// listen for errors
wrtc.on('error', function (err, source) {
  console.error(err)
})

Methods

var wrtc = require('electron-webrtc')([opts])

Calling the function exported by this module will create a new hidden Electron process. It is recommended to only create one, since Electron uses a lot of resources.

An optional opts object may contain specific options (including headless mode). See electron-eval

The object returned by this function has the same API as the node-webrtc package.

Any errors that occur when communicating with the Electron daemon will be emitted by the wrtc object (wrtc.on('error', ...)).

wrtc.close()

Closes the Electron process and releases its resources. You may not need to do this since the Electron process will close automatically after the Node process terminates.

Properties

wrtc.electronDaemon

A handle to the electron-eval daemon that this module uses to talk to the Electron process.

Events

- error

Emitted by RTCPeerConnection or RTCDataChannel when daemon.eval() evaluates code that throws an internal error.

Running on a headless server

Chromium normally won't run on a headless server since it expects a screen that it can render to. So to work around this, we can use Xvfb, a utility that creates a framebuffer that Chromium can use as a virtual screen.

First, install Xvfb:

apt-get install xvfb # Ubuntu/Debian
yum install xorg-x11-server-Xvfb # CentOS

Create the HEADLESS env variable:

export HEADLESS=true

Or if you want to do it programmatically, initialize a new instance and pass in headless as a key as demonstrated:

var wrtc = require('electron-webrtc')({ headless: true })

Now you may run your WebRTC code with electron-webrtc :)

Related Modules

About

⚛ Use WebRTC in Node.js via a hidden Electron process

Resources

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • JavaScript 100.0%