A set of session-focused utilities for lightweight data sharing and messaging.
A session is a period of time when one or more clients are connected to a Fluid service. Session data and messages may be exchanged among clients, but will disappear once the no clients remain. (More specifically once no clients remain that have acquired the session IPresence
interface.) Once fully implemented, no client will require container write permissions to use Presence features.
For the lifetime of a session, each client connecting will be established as a unique and stable ISessionClient
. The representation is stable because it will remain the same ISessionClient
instance independent of connection drops and reconnections.
Client Ids maintained by ISessionClient
may be used to associate ISessionClient
with quorum, audience, and service audience members.
Within Presence data sharing and messaging is broken into workspaces with custom identifiers (workspace addresses). Clients must use the same address within a session to connect with others. Unique addresses enable logical components within a client runtime to remain isolated or work together (without other piping between those components).
There are two types of workspaces: States and Notifications.
A states workspace, PresenceStates
, allows sharing of simple data across attendees where each attendee maintains their own data values that others may read, but not change. This is distinct from a Fluid DDS where data values might be manipulated by multiple clients and one ultimate value is derived. Shared, independent values are maintained by value managers that specialize in incrementality and history of values.
A notifications workspace, PresenceNotifications
, is similar to states workspace, but is dedicated to notification use-cases via NotificationsManager
.
Latest value manager retains the most recent atomic value each attendee has shared. Use Latest
to add one to PresenceStates
workspace.
Latest map value manager retains the most recent atomic value each attendee has shared under arbitrary keys. Values associated with a key may be nullified (appears as deleted). Use LatestMap
to add one to PresenceStates
workspace.
Notifications value managers are special case where no data is retained during a session and all interactions appear as events that are sent and received. Notifications value managers may be mixed into a PresenceStates
workspace for convenience. They are the only type of value managers permitted in a PresenceNotifications
workspace. Use Notifications
to add one to PresenceNotifications
or PresenceStates
workspace.
While this package is developing as experimental and other Fluid Framework internals are being updated to accommodate it, a temporary Shared Object must be added within container to gain access.
import { acquirePresenceViaDataObject, ExperimentalPresenceManager } from "@fluid-experimental/presence";
const containerSchema = {
initialObjects: {
presence: ExperimentalPresenceManager
}
} satisfies ContainerSchema;
const presence = await acquirePresenceViaDataObject(container.initialObjects.presence);
The current implementation relies on Fluid Framework's Signal infrastructure instead of Ops. This has advantages, but comes with some risk of unreliable messaging. The most common known case of unreliable signals occurs during reconnection periods and current implementation attempts to account for that. Be aware that all clients are not guaranteed to arrive at eventual consistency. Please file a new issue if one is not found under Presence States issues.
Current API does not provide a mechanism to validate that state and notification data received within session from other clients matches the types declared. The schema of workspace address, states and notifications names, and their types will only be consistent when all clients connected to the session are using the same types for a unique value/notification path (workspace address + name within workspace). In other words, don't mix versions or make sure to change identifiers when changing types in a non-compatible way.
Example:
presence.getStates("app:v1states", { myState: Latest({x: 0})});
is incompatible with
presence.getStates("app:v1states", { myState: Latest({x: "text"})});
as "app:v1states"+"myState" have different value type expectations: {x: number}
versus {x: string}
.
presence.getStates("app:v1states", { myState2: Latest({x: true})});
would be compatible with both of the prior schemas as "myState2" is a different name. Though in this situation none of the different clients would be able to observe each other.
Notifications API is mostly unimplemented. All messages are always broadcast even if unicast
API is used and all are emitted as unattendedNotification
event rather than the appropriate custom event.
Notifications are fundamentally unreliable at this time as there are no built-in acknowledgements nor retained state. To prevent most common loss of notifications, always check for connection before sending.
IMPORTANT: This package is experimental. Its APIs may change without notice.
Do not use in production scenarios.
When taking a dependency on a Fluid Framework library's public APIs, we recommend using a ^
(caret) version range, such as ^1.3.4
.
While Fluid Framework libraries may use different ranges with interdependencies between other Fluid Framework libraries,
library consumers should always prefer ^
.
If using any of Fluid Framework's unstable APIs (for example, its beta
APIs), we recommend using a more constrained version range, such as ~
.
To get started, install the package by running the following command:
npm i @fluid-experimental/presence
API documentation for @fluid-experimental/presence is available at https://fluidframework.com/docs/apis/presence.
These are the platform requirements for the current version of Fluid Framework Client Packages. These requirements err on the side of being too strict since within a major version they can be relaxed over time, but not made stricter. For Long Term Support (LTS) versions this can require supporting these platforms for several years.
It is likely that other configurations will work, but they are not supported: if they stop working, we do not consider that a bug. If you would benefit from support for something not listed here, file an issue and the product team will evaluate your request. When making such a request please include if the configuration already works (and thus the request is just that it becomes officially supported), or if changes are required to get it working.
- NodeJs ^20.10.0 except that we will drop support for it when NodeJs 20 loses its upstream support on 2026-04-30, and will support a newer LTS version of NodeJS (22) at least 1 year before 20 is end-of-life. This same policy applies to NodeJS 22 when it is end of life (2027-04-30).
- Modern browsers supporting the es2022 standard library: in response to asks we can add explicit support for using babel to polyfill to target specific standards or runtimes (meaning we can avoid/remove use of things that don't polyfill robustly, but otherwise target modern standards).
- TypeScript 5.4:
- All
strict
options are supported. strictNullChecks
is required.- Configuration options deprecated in 5.0 are not supported.
exactOptionalPropertyTypes
is currently not fully supported. If used, narrowing members of Fluid Framework types types usingin
,Reflect.has
,Object.hasOwn
orObject.prototype.hasOwnProperty
should be avoided as they may incorrectly excludeundefined
from the possible values in some cases.
- All
- webpack 5
- We are not intending to be prescriptive about what bundler to use. Other bundlers which can handle ES Modules should work, but webpack is the only one we actively test.
Node16
, NodeNext
, or Bundler
resolution should be used with TypeScript compilerOptions to follow the Node.js v12+ ESM Resolution and Loading algorithm.
Node10 resolution is not supported as it does not support Fluid Framework's API structuring pattern that is used to distinguish stable APIs from those that are in development.
-
ES Modules: ES Modules are the preferred way to consume our client packages (including in NodeJs) and consuming our client packages from ES Modules is fully supported.
-
CommonJs: Consuming our client packages as CommonJs is supported only in NodeJS and only for the cases listed below. This is done to accommodate some workflows without good ES Module support. If you have a workflow you would like included in this list, file an issue. Once this list of workflows motivating CommonJS support is empty, we may drop support for CommonJS one year after notice of the change is posted here.
- Testing with Jest (which lacks stable ESM support due to unstable APIs in NodeJs)
There are many ways to contribute to Fluid.
- Participate in Q&A in our GitHub Discussions.
- Submit bugs and help us verify fixes as they are checked in.
- Review the source code changes.
- Contribute bug fixes.
Detailed instructions for working in the repo can be found in the Wiki.
This project has adopted the Microsoft Open Source Code of Conduct. For more information see the Code of Conduct FAQ or contact opencode@microsoft.com with any additional questions or comments.
This project may contain Microsoft trademarks or logos for Microsoft projects, products, or services. Use of these trademarks or logos must follow Microsoft’s Trademark & Brand Guidelines. Use of Microsoft trademarks or logos in modified versions of this project must not cause confusion or imply Microsoft sponsorship.
Not finding what you're looking for in this README? Check out fluidframework.com.
Still not finding what you're looking for? Please file an issue.
Thank you!
This project may contain Microsoft trademarks or logos for Microsoft projects, products, or services.
Use of these trademarks or logos must follow Microsoft's Trademark & Brand Guidelines.
Use of Microsoft trademarks or logos in modified versions of this project must not cause confusion or imply Microsoft sponsorship.