CRITICAL: createPubSub.publish() was dispatching CustomEvent with
just the event type (e.g. 'call.responded') instead of the composite
topic string ('call.responded:uuid-123'). This broke all adapters
that rely on topic-scoped dispatch — Redis subscribe/publish
channels didn't match, and WS server fan-out routing would fail.
Fixed to dispatch with the full type:id composite.
Other fixes:
- Add __ prefix runtime guard in publish() (reserved for control)
- Add Redis barrel re-export to src/index.ts (ADR-002 compliance)
- Clarify WS server: adapter's onclose calls removeConnection
internally; user doesn't need to
- WS client: document null callback no-op, removeEventListener
edge cases (unregistered callback, null callback)
- WS server: document dispatchEvent always returns true
- Redis spec: document in-flight message edge case after unsubscribe
- Worker adapter: rename createMainThreadEventTarget to
createWorkerThreadEventTarget, createWorkerEventTarget to
createWorkerHostEventTarget (fix inverted naming)
- api-surface.md: add PubSub.publish() section documenting the
type:id composite and __ guard
7.1 KiB
status, last_updated
| status | last_updated |
|---|---|
| draft | 2026-05-08 |
API Surface
Core pubsub creation, types, and operators. No transport dependencies.
createPubSub
function createPubSub<TEventMap extends PubSubEventMap>(
config?: PubSubConfig<TEventMap>,
): PubSub<TEventMap>;
Factory function. Accepts an optional eventTarget config. If none is provided, uses new EventTarget() (in-process).
Event Envelope
Every event dispatched through pubsub uses the EventEnvelope format:
interface EventEnvelope<TType extends string = string, TPayload = unknown> {
readonly type: TType;
readonly id: string;
readonly payload: TPayload;
}
The envelope is the cross-platform serialization contract. All transport adapters serialize/deserialize this format. Domain-specific data goes in payload.
Reserved Event Types
Event types starting with __ (double underscore) are reserved for adapter control messages (e.g., __subscribe, __unsubscribe). User code must not define event types with this prefix. Control events use the empty string "" for the id field by convention — they use the topic field in their payload for routing instead. createPubSub.publish() should reject or warn on event types starting with __. See ADR-003.
Topic Scoping
Topics are scoped by id using the type:id convention:
pubsub.publish("call.responded", requestId, { output });
// → dispatches event with CustomEvent type "call.responded:{requestId}", detail = { type, id, payload }
const stream = pubsub.subscribe("call.responded", requestId);
// → subscribes to topic "call.responded:{requestId}"
Unlike the previous tuple-based model, id is always required. This simplifies the type system and makes correlation explicit.
PubSubEventMap
The type parameter that defines the event map. Maps event type strings to their payload types:
type PubSubEventMap = {
[eventType: string]: unknown;
};
PubSub.publish()
Publishes an event to the pubsub. Throws if the event type starts with __ (reserved for adapter control messages).
pubsub.publish("call.responded", requestId, { output });
// → dispatches event with CustomEvent type "call.responded:{requestId}", detail = { type, id, payload }
The CustomEvent.type is the composite type:id string. This is the key that addEventListener and dispatchEvent use for matching. The EventEnvelope in detail preserves the separate type and id fields for transport adapters that need them.
PubSub.subscribe()
Returns a Repeater<EventEnvelope<TKey, TPayload>> (async iterable). Consumers iterate with for await:
for await (const envelope of pubsub.subscribe("session.status", sessionId)) {
// envelope.type === "session.status"
// envelope.id === sessionId
// envelope.payload === the typed payload
}
The Repeater automatically cleans up its addEventListener when the consumer breaks out of the loop (the stop promise resolves).
Types
| Export | Source | Description |
|---|---|---|
EventEnvelope<TType, TPayload> |
types.ts |
Cross-platform envelope: { type, id, payload }. JSON-serializable. |
TypedEvent<TType, TDetail> |
types.ts |
Event with typed type and detail. Omits CustomEvent's untyped fields. |
TypedEventTarget<TEvent> |
types.ts |
Extends EventTarget with typed addEventListener, dispatchEvent, removeEventListener. |
TypedEventListener<TEvent> |
types.ts |
(evt: TEvent) => void |
TypedEventListenerObject<TEvent> |
types.ts |
{ handleEvent(object: TEvent): void } |
TypedEventListenerOrEventListenerObject<TEvent> |
types.ts |
Union of the above |
PubSub<TEventMap> |
create_pubsub.ts |
{ publish, subscribe } — publish takes (type, id, payload), subscribe takes (type, id) and returns Repeater<EventEnvelope> |
PubSubConfig<TEventMap> |
create_pubsub.ts |
{ eventTarget?: PubSubEventTarget } |
PubSubEvent<TEventMap, TType> |
create_pubsub.ts |
Derived TypedEvent for a specific event type, with detail as EventEnvelope<TType, TPayload> |
PubSubEventTarget<TEventMap> |
create_pubsub.ts |
TypedEventTarget<PubSubEvent<...>> |
Operators
All operators work with any AsyncIterable. Operators that return Repeater provide backpressure-aware push semantics.
Repeater-returning operators
These wrap source iterables in a Repeater with explicit push/stop control:
filter
function filter<T>(filterFn: (value: T) => Promise<boolean> | boolean): (source: AsyncIterable<T>) => Repeater<T>;
Type-narrowing overload available: filter<T, U extends T>(fn: (input: T) => input is U).
map
function map<T, O>(mapper: (input: T) => Promise<O> | O): (source: AsyncIterable<T>) => Repeater<O>;
pipe
function pipe<A, B>(a: A, ab: (a: A) => B): B;
// up to 5 arguments
Compose operators: pipe(pubsub.subscribe("myEvent", id), filter(isRelevant), map(transform))
AsyncGenerator operators
These use native async function* generators for simpler stream transformations:
take
Yields only the first count items from the source.
async function* take<T>(source: AsyncIterable<T>, count: number): AsyncIterable<T>
reduce
Reduces the stream to a single value.
async function reduce<T, U>(source: AsyncIterable<T>, reducer: (acc: U, value: T) => Promise<U> | U, initialValue: U): Promise<U>
toArray
Collects all items into an array.
async function toArray<T>(source: AsyncIterable<T>): Promise<T[]>
batch
Groups items into arrays of size.
async function* batch<T>(source: AsyncIterable<T>, size: number): AsyncIterable<T[]>
dedupe
Yields only unique items (uses Set for deduplication).
async function* dedupe<T>(source: AsyncIterable<T>): AsyncIterable<T>
window
Sliding window of size items, advancing by step (default 1).
async function* window<T>(source: AsyncIterable<T>, size: number, step?: number): AsyncIterable<T[]>
flat
Flattens an AsyncIterable<T[]> into AsyncIterable<T>.
async function* flat<T>(source: AsyncIterable<T[]>): AsyncIterable<T>
groupBy
Groups items by key into a Map. Terminal operation (consumes entire stream).
async function groupBy<T, K>(source: AsyncIterable<T>, keyFn: (value: T) => K): Promise<Map<K, T[]>>
chain
Concatenates multiple async iterables into one.
async function* chain<T>(...sources: AsyncIterable<T>[]): AsyncIterable<T>
join
Streaming join between two sources on matching keys.
async function* join<T, U, K>(source1: AsyncIterable<T>, source2: AsyncIterable<U>, keyFn1: (value: T) => K, keyFn2: (value: U) => K): AsyncIterable<[T, U]>
Attribution
createPubSub, filter, map, and pipe are adapted from @graphql-yoga/subscription (MIT). TypedEventTarget types are adapted from @graphql-yoga/typed-event-target (MIT). Repeater is inlined from @repeaterjs/repeater (MIT). See file headers for full license text.