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Redux-Boost makes it easy to make API calls and use them inside of the Redux store and React-components.

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Redux Boost

redux-boost works with React Redux to enable smooth HTTP request handling in React using Redux to store all the request updates.

TODO:

Installation

npm install --save redux-boost

or

yarn add redux-boost

Development

You will need a few global node modules installed.

npm install -g npm-run-all np rimraf

Documentation

Getting Started

The basic implementation of redux-boost is simple. However, to make the most of it, it's recommended to have basic knowledge on:

Overview

To connect your React form components to your Redux store you'll need the following pieces from the redux-boost package:

  • Redux middleware createRequestMiddleware().
  • Redux Reducers: requestsReducer and dataReducer,
  • React HOC restQuery() for GET requests.
  • React HOC restMutation() for other types of requests.

It's important to understand their responsibilities:

type responsibility
requestsReducer dataReducer reducer function that tells how to update the Redux store based on changes coming from the application; those changes are described by Redux actions
restQuery() restMutation() HOC function that takes configuration object and returns a new function; use it to wrap your React component and bind user interaction to dispatch of Redux actions
requestMiddleware middleware function that provides a third-party extension point between dispatching an action, and the moment it reaches the reducer

Data flow

The diagram below represents the simplified data flow. Note that in most cases you don't need to worry about the action creators for yourself, as they're already bound to dispatch for certain actions.

Let's go through a simple example. We have a React component wrapped with restQuery(). There is a list inside of it that need data to be fetched from the server to be rendered correctly. The data flows like this:

  1. Component gets rendered for the first time,
  2. restQuery dispatches fetchStart action with query description passed into it,
  3. requestMiddleware catches this action and initiates HTTP request,
  4. requestsReducer catches this action too and updatse Redux state with request state,
  5. restQuery updates wrapped component passing request state into it,
  6. On request resolution requestMiddleware dispatches a relevant action, either fetchSuccess or fetchFail,
  7. requestsReducer updates request state with the result or an error
  8. restQuery updates wrapped component with the final request state,

With redux-boost comes a lot more: hooks for error handling and props to refetch the data, data selectors and action creators. This guide describes the basic usage – feel free to dig deeper.

Basic Usage Guide

Step 1 of 3: Request middleware

The store should know how to handle actions with quert descriptions to intiate HTTP requests. To enable this, we need to pass the createRequestMiddleware to your store.

import axios from 'axios'
import { applyMiddleware } from 'redux'
import { createRequestMiddleware } from 'redux-boost'

const middlewares = [
  createRequestMiddleware({
    // Executor is function that will initiate HTTP requests
    executor: axios
 }),
  // ...otherMiddlewares,
]

export const enhancer = applyMiddleware(...middlewares)

Now your store knows how to initiate HTTP requests received from the certain actions.

Step 2 of 3: Request and data reducers

The store should know how to handle actions coming from the form components. To enable this, we need to pass the requestsReducer and dataReducer to your store. It serves for all of your form components, so you only have to pass it once.

import { createStore, combineReducers } from 'redux'
import { dataReducer, requestsReducer } from 'redux-boost'

const rootReducer = combineReducers({
  // ...your other reducers here
  // you have to pass requestsReducer under 'requests' key,
  // and dataReducer under 'data` key.
  data: dataReducer,
  requests: requestsReducer,
})

const store = createStore(rootReducer)

Now your store knows how to handle actions coming from the form components.

NOTE: The keys used to pass the redux-boost reducer should be named requests and data.

Step 3 of 3: High-order components

To make your React component communicate with the store, we need to wrap it with restQuery() to receive data from the server or restMutation() to mutate data on the server. It will provide the props about the current request state and function to refetch data.

import React from 'react'
import { restQuery } from 'redux-boost'

const FriendList = props => {
  // getFriends prop updates on each request stage: [START, SUCCESS, FAIL]
  const { getFriends: { result, loading, error } } = props

  if (loading) return <Spinner>...loading</Spinner>
  if (error) return <Error>{error.message}</Error>

  return result.map(friend => <div key={friend.id}>{friend.name}</div>)
}

export default restQuery({
  // a unique name the request, will be used as a prop name and redux state key
  name: 'getFriends',

  // options allows to use ownProps of the component
  // to create dynamic parts of the query
  options: ({ userId }) => ({
    // payload will be passed to the executor function, it's axios in our example
    payload: 'http://awesome.api.com/friends?userId=${userId}'
  }),

  // we don't want to fetch anything if userId is not defined
  skip: ({ userId }) => !userId,
})(FriendList)

NOTE: If the ()() syntax seems confusing, you can always break it down into two steps:

// ...

// create new, "configured" function
createRestQuery = restQuery(configuration)

// evaluate it for FriendList component
const FriendListContainer = createRestQuery(FriendList)

export default FriendListContainer

API

createRequestMiddleware(config)

Creates a middleware that will handle request actions generated by the library to make network requests. Configuration keys:

Key Default value Description
method 'GET' Default HTTP method to use if no method passed in the request action.
executor fetch() A function that will execute HTTP request executor(...requestAction.payload)
prepareExecutor A function that is called before the request to alter executor in some way using request description. prepareExecutor(executor, requestAction)
serialize A function that is called with the body of the response, allowing you to transform it. serialize(response)
onSuccess A function that is only called on network request successful completion. onSuccess({ name, result })
onError A function that is only called on network request error. onError({ name, error })

createActions(actionTypes [, prefix])

Returns an object with action creators. If prefix is passed, it will be used to prefix type in each action creator.

const actions = createActions([
  'set',
  'delete',
  'update',
], 'users')

// actions.set(profile)         -> { type: 'users/set', payload: profile }
// actions.delete({ id: 77 })   -> { type: 'users/delete', payload: { id: 77 } }

// actions.set.type             === 'users/set'
// String(actions.set)          === 'users/set'
// actions.set.isReduxAction    === true

Apart from payload, the second argument in action creator creates meta property, which can be useful in middlewares.

// actions.update({ name }, callback) -> 
// {
//   type: 'users/update',
//   payload: { name },
//   meta: callback
// }

createReducer(handlers [, defaultState])

Returns a new reducer.

  • handlers: object, that provides mapping between action types and action handlers.
  • defaultState (anything, optional): the initial state of the reducer. Must not be empty if you plan to use this reducer inside a combineReducers
import { actions } from './actions'

const DECREMENT_ACTION_TYPE = 'DECREMENT'

const counterReducer = createReducer({
  [actions.increment]: (state) => state + 1,
  [actions.add]: (state, payload) => state + payload,
  [DECREMENT_ACTION_TYPE]: state => state - 1,
}, 0)

Examples

Store configuration

/* eslint-disable */
import { combineReducers } from 'redux'
import {
  boostStore,
  createStore,
  dataReducer,
  requestsReducer,
} from 'redux-boost'

const myReducer = combineReducers({
  data: dataReducer,
  requests: requestsReducer,
})

const { store, persistor } = createStore({
  initialState: {},
  reducer: myReducer,

  reduxLogger: 'fallback',
  devtoolExtension: true,

  // --- Redux persist config
  reduxPersist: {
    key: 'root',
    whitelist: ['auth'],
    // storage,
  },

  // --- Middlewares config
  middlewares: {
    saga: true,
    thunk: true,
    eventFilter: true,
  },

  // middlewares: [
  //   ...customMiddlewaresArray,
  // ],
})

// If store is not created by redux-boost
// `boostStore` call is required to enable binded `fetchStart` action
boostStore(store)

React integration

restQuery — HOC for GET requests.

restMutation – HOC for other types of requests.

API is similar to React-Apollo library.

First wrap React component into HOC to receive desired functionality.

import { compose } from 'redux'
import { connect } from 'react-redux'
import { getResponse, restMutation, restQuery } from 'redux-boost'

import exampleSaga from 'modules/sagas/exampleSaga'

import ExampleComponent from './ExampleComponent'

const mapStateToProps = state => ({
  latestQuote: getResponse(state, { operation: 'operationName' }),
})

export default compose(
  connect(mapStateToProps),

  // On componentDidMount will execute declared action which should
  // return promise to track request status and receive result later in props
  restQuery({
    name: 'requiredData',
    action: fetchRequiredData,
    options: props => ({
      userId: props.userId,
    }),
  }),

  // Provides props to make request, track it's status and receive result
  restMutation({
    // {
    //   name: 'exampleSaga',
    //   action: exampleSagaAction,
    // }
    ...exampleSaga,

    // Will be passed to the executor as a request params
    options: ({ foo, bar }) => ({
      foo: foo.toUpperCase(),
      bar,
      constant: 1,
    }),
  })
)(ExampleComponent)

Then use provided props to send mutation request and display queried data.

// In React component use mutation name to access passed properties
import React, { Component } from 'react'

class ExampleComponent extends Component {
  executeMutation = async () => {
    // Mutation result promise which resolves with result of the mutation
    // But anyway mutation result will be passed as a prop to the component too
    const result = await this.props.exampleSaga.mutate({
      additionalProp: 'value', // Will be merged into the params defined in container
    })

    console.log(result)
  }

  render() {
    const {
      requiredData,
      exampleSaga: { loading, mutate, result, error },
    } = this.props

    if (requiredData.loading) {
      return <div>...loading</div>
    }

    return (
      <div>
        <Data {...requiredData.result} />
        <button onClick={this.executeMutation}>Mutate</button>

        {loading && '...mutation result is loading'}
        {result && <ResultComponent {...result} />}
      </div>
    )
  }
}

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Redux-Boost makes it easy to make API calls and use them inside of the Redux store and React-components.

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