iris/_examples/http_responsewriter/sse-third-party/main.go

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package main
import (
"time"
"github.com/kataras/iris/v12"
"github.com/r3labs/sse"
)
// First of all install the sse third-party package (you can use other if you don't like this approach or go ahead to the "sse" example)
// $ go get -u github.com/r3labs/sse
func main() {
app := iris.New()
s := sse.New()
/*
This creates a new stream inside of the scheduler.
Seeing as there are no consumers, publishing a message
to this channel will do nothing.
Clients can connect to this stream once the iris handler is started
by specifying stream as a url parameter, like so:
http://localhost:8080/events?stream=messages
*/
s.CreateStream("messages")
app.Any("/events", iris.FromStd(s.HTTPHandler))
go func() {
// You design when to send messages to the client,
// here we just wait 5 seconds to send the first message
// in order to give u time to open a browser window...
time.Sleep(5 * time.Second)
// Publish a payload to the stream.
s.Publish("messages", &sse.Event{
Data: []byte("ping"),
})
time.Sleep(3 * time.Second)
s.Publish("messages", &sse.Event{
Data: []byte("second message"),
})
time.Sleep(2 * time.Second)
s.Publish("messages", &sse.Event{
Data: []byte("third message"),
})
}() // ...
app.Listen(":8080", iris.WithoutServerError(iris.ErrServerClosed))
}
/* For a golang SSE client you can look at: https://github.com/r3labs/sse#example-client */