Converts an MQTT topic with parameters into a regular expression.
Unless you need regex support, you should use mqtt-pattern which is faster
var mqtt_regex = require("mqtt-regex");
var pattern = "chat/+id/+user/#path";
var room_message_info = mqtt_regex(pattern).exec;
var topic = "chat/lobby/bob/text";
var message_content = "Hello, World!";
var params = room_message_info(topic);
if(params && (params.path.indexOf("text") !== -1)) {
chat.getRoom(params.id).sendFrom(params.user, message_content)
}
With npm:
$ npm install --save mqtt-regex
To use it in the browser, either compile a package with node run build
or
use Browserify.
The API is super simple and should be easy to integrate with any project
Takes an MQTT topic pattern, and generates a RegExp object along with a function for parsing params from the result. The results also have an exec
function that does both.
The return looks like
{
regex: "RegExp object for matching"
getParams: function(results){
// Processes results from RegExp.prototype.exec
// Returns an object containing the values for each param
},
exec: function(topic){
// Performs regex.exec on topic
// If there was a match, parses parameters and returns result
},
topic: "Regular MQTT topic with the pattern stuff stripped out"
}
MQTT defines two types of "wildcards", one for matching a single section of the path (+
), and one for zero or more sections of the path (#
).
Note that the #
wildcard can only be used if it's at the end of the topic.
This library was inspired by the syntax in the routers for Express and Sinatra, and an attempt was made to have this just as simple to use.
This would match paths that start with user/
, and then extract the next section as the user id
.
Then it would get all subsequent paths and turn them into an array for the path
param.
Here is some input/output that you can expect:
user/bob/status/mood: {id: "bob", path:["status","mood"]
user/bob: {id:"bob", path: []}
user/bob/ishungry: {id: "bob", path: ["ishungry"]
Not all wildcards need to be associated with a parameter, and it could be useful to just use plain MQTT topics. In this example you might only care about the status of some part of a device, and are willing to ignore a part of the path. Here are some examples of what this might be used with:
device/deviceversion/deviceidhere/component/infrared/status/active: {type:"infrared",path: ["status","active"]}