A Bonjour/Zeroconf protocol implementation in TypeScript. Publish services on the local network or discover existing services using multicast DNS.
This is a rewrite of the project Bonjour (https://github.com/watson/bonjour) into modern TypeScript.
bonjour-service is supported by ON LX Limited. Check out our projects such as Ctrl Suite and Ctrl for iPad.
Add to your project dependencies using Yarn or NPM.
yarn add bonjour-service
npm install bonjour-service
import Bonjour from 'bonjour-service'
const instance = new Bonjour()
// advertise an HTTP server on port 3000
instance.publish({ name: 'My Web Server', type: 'http', port: 3000 })
// browse for all http services
instance.find({ type: 'http' }, function (service) {
console.log('Found an HTTP server:', service)
})
var instance = new Bonjour({ options }, errorCallback)
The options
are optional and will be used when initializing the
underlying multicast-dns server. For details see the multicast-dns
documentation.
errorCallback
is an optional callback used to gracefully handle errors that would otherwise
crash the process. While not being strictly required, providing this is highly recommended
Publishes a new service.
Options are:
name
(string)host
(string, optional) - defaults to local hostnameport
(number)type
(string)subtypes
(array of strings, optional)protocol
(string, optional) -udp
ortcp
(default)txt
(object, optional) - a key/value object to broadcast as the TXT recorddisableIPv6
(boolean, optional) disble IPv6 addresses
IANA maintains a list of official service types and port numbers.
Unpublish all services. The optional callback
will be called when the
services have been unpublished.
Destroy the mdns instance. Closes the udp socket.
Listen for services advertised on the network. An optional callback can
be provided as the 2nd argument and will be added as an event listener
for the up
event.
Options (all optional):
type
(string)subtypes
(array of strings)protocol
(string) - defaults totcp
txt
(object) - passed into dns-txt module contructor. Set to{ binary: true }
if you want to keep the TXT records in binary
Listen for and call the callback
with the first instance of a service
matching the options
. If no callback
is given, it's expected that
you listen for the up
event. The returned browser
will automatically
stop it self after the first matching service.
Options are the same as given in the browser.find
function.
Emitted every time a new service is found that matches the browser.
Emitted every time an existing service emmits a goodbye message.
Emitted every time an existing service does a new announcement with an updated TXT record.
An array of services known by the browser to be online.
Start looking for matching services.
Stop looking for matching services.
Broadcast the query again.
Emitted when the service is up.
Emitted if an error occurrs while publishing the service.
Unpublish the service. The optional callback
will be called when the
service have been unpublished.
Publish the service.
The name of the service, e.g. Apple TV
.
The type of the service, e.g. http
.
An array of subtypes. Note that this property might be null
.
The protocol used by the service, e.g. tcp
.
The hostname or ip address where the service resides.
The port on which the service listens, e.g. 5000
.
The fully qualified domain name of the service. E.g. if given the name
Foo Bar
, the type http
and the protocol tcp
, the service.fqdn
property will be Foo Bar._http._tcp.local
.
The TXT record advertised by the service (a key/value object). Note that
this property might be null
.
A boolean indicating if the service is currently published.
MIT