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angularjs - angular JS - communicate between non-dependend services

I am new in angular and encounter a catch-22:

Facts:

  1. I have a service that logs my stuff (my-logger).

  2. I have replaced the $ExceptionHandler (of angular), with my own implementation which forwards uncaught exceptions to my-logger service

  3. I have another service, pusher-service, that needs to be notified whenever a fatal message is to be logged somewhere in my application using 'my-logger'.

Problem:

I can't have 'my-logger' be depend on 'pusher' since it will create circular dependency (as 'pusher' uses $http. The circle: $ExceptionHandler -> my-logger -> pusher -> $http -> $ExceptionHandler...)

My attempts:

In order to make these 2 services communicate with each other, I wanted to use $watch on the pusher-service: watches a property on $rootscope that will be updated in my-logger. But, when trying to consume $rootScope in 'my-logger', in order to update the property on which the 'pusher' "watches", I fail on circular dependency as it turns out that $rootscope depends on $ExceptionHandler (the circle: $ExceptionHandler -> my-logger -> $rootScope -> $ExceptionHandler).

Tried to find an option to get, at runtime, the scope object that in its context 'my-logger' service works. can't find such an option.

Can't use broadcast as well, as it requires my-logger to get access to the scope ($rootScope) and that is impossible as seen above.

My Question:

Is there an angular way to have two services communicate through a 3rd party entity ?

Any idea how this can be solved ?

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Use a 3rd service that acts as a notification/pubsub service:

.factory('NotificationService', [function() {
    var event1ServiceHandlers = [];
    return {
        // publish
        event1Happened: function(some_data) {
            angular.forEach(event1ServiceHandlers, function(handler) {
                handler(some_data);
            });
        },
        // subscribe
        onEvent1: function(handler) {
            event1ServiceHandlers.push(handler);
        }
    };
}])

Above, I only show one event/message type. Each additional event/message would need its own array, publish method, and subscribe method.

.factory('Service1', ['NotificationService',
function(NotificationService) {
    // event1 handler
    var event1Happened = function(some_data) {
        console.log('S1', some_data);
        // do something here
    }
    // subscribe to event1
    NotificationService.onEvent1(event1Happened);
    return {
        someMethod: function() {
           ...
           // publish event1
           NotificationService.event1Happened(my_data);
        },
    };
}])

Service2 would be coded similarly to Service1.

Notice how $rootScope, $broadcast, and scopes are not used with this approach, because they are not needed with inter-service communication.

With the above implementation, services (once created) stay subscribed for the life of the app. You could add methods to handle unsubscribing.

In my current project, I use the same NotificationService to also handle pubsub for controller scopes. (See Updating "time ago" values in Angularjs and Momentjs if interested).


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