Async Connector to open TCP/IP and SSL/TLS based connections.
Think of this library as an async version of
fsockopen()
or
stream_socket_client()
.
Before you can actually transmit and receive data to/from a remote server, you have to establish a connection to the remote end. Establishing this connection through the internet/network takes some time as it requires several steps in order to complete:
- Resolve remote target hostname via DNS (+cache)
- Complete TCP handshake (2 roundtrips) with remote target IP:port
- Optionally enable SSL/TLS on the new resulting connection
In order to use this project, you'll need the following react boilerplate code to initialize the main loop and select your DNS server if you have not already set it up anyway.
$loop = React\EventLoop\Factory::create();
$dnsResolverFactory = new React\Dns\Resolver\Factory();
$dns = $dnsResolverFactory->createCached('8.8.8.8', $loop);
The React\SocketClient\Connector
provides a single promise-based
create($host, $ip)
method which resolves as soon as the connection
succeeds or fails.
$connector = new React\SocketClient\Connector($loop, $dns);
$connector->create('www.google.com', 80)->then(function (React\Stream\Stream $stream) {
$stream->write('...');
$stream->close();
});
The SecureConnector
class decorates a given Connector
instance by enabling
SSL/TLS encryption as soon as the raw TCP/IP connection succeeds. It provides
the same promise- based create($host, $ip)
method which resolves with
a Stream
instance that can be used just like any non-encrypted stream.
$secureConnector = new React\SocketClient\SecureConnector($connector, $loop);
$secureConnector->create('www.google.com', 443)->then(function (React\Stream\Stream $stream) {
$stream->write("GET / HTTP/1.0\r\nHost: www.google.com\r\n\r\n");
...
});