Awesome
Angular ngrx-data
This repository is now merged with @ngrx into @ngrx/data. You can find the ngrx/data docs here and the github repository with ngrx/data in it here
Please read the note above
Zero Ngrx Boilerplate
You may never write an action, reducer, selector, effect, or HTTP dataservice again.
NgRx helps Angular applications manage shared state in a "reactive" style, following the redux pattern.
But to use it properly requires both a deep understanding of redux/ngrx and a lot of boilerplate code.
Ngrx-data is an ngrx extension that offers a gentle introduction to ngrx/redux without the boilerplate.
Try it! See the Quick Start for instructions on adding NgRx and ngrx-data to your app.
<a id="why"></a>
Why use ngrx-data?
Many applications have substantial domain models with 10s or 100s of entity types such as Customer, Order, LineItem, Product, and User.
In plain ngrx, to create, retrieve, update, and delete (CRUD) data for every entity type is an overwhelming task. You're writing actions, action-creators, reducers, effects, dispatchers, and selectors as well as the HTTP GET, PUT, POST, and DELETE methods for each entity type.
In even a small model, this is a ton of repetitive code to create, maintain, and test.
The ngrx-data library is one way to stay on the ngrx path while radically reducing the "boilerplate" necessary to manage entities with ngrx.
It's still NgRx
This is a library for ngrx, not an ngrx alternative.
It's easy to combine standard ngrx with ngrx-data. It's easy to take control when you need it and hand control back to ngrx-data when you're done.
Every entity has its own actions. Every operation takes its unique journey through the store, reducers, effects, and selectors. You just let ngrx-data create these for you.
You can add custom store properties, actions, reducers, selectors, and effects. You can override any ngrx-data behavior for an individual entity type or for all entities. You can make your own calls to the server and update the cached entity collections with the results using ngrx-data cache-only actions.
You can see the ngrx machinery at work with the redux developer tools. You can listen to the flow of actions directly. You can intercept and override anything ... but you only have to intervene where you want to add custom logic.
Learn about it
For a hands-on experience, try the QuickStart in the tutorial git repo, ngrx-data-lab, which guides you on the few, simple steps necessary to migrate from a typical service-based Angular app, to an app that manages state with ngrx-data.
This ngrx-data repository has the main documentation and its own sample app.
The sample app in the src/client/app/
folder presents an editor for viewing and changing Heroes and Villains.
The following reduced extract from that demo illustrates the essential mechanics of configuring and using ngrx-data.
You begin with a description of the entity model in a few lines of metadata.
// Metadata for the entity model
export const entityMetadata: EntityMetadataMap = {
Hero: {},
Villain: {}
};
// Help ngrx-data pluralize entity type names
// because the plural of "Hero" is not "Heros"
export const pluralNames = {
Hero: 'Heroes' // the plural of Hero
};
You register the metadata and plurals with the ngrx-data
module.
@NgModule({
imports: [
NgrxDataModule.forRoot({
entityMetadata: entityMetadata,
pluralNames: pluralNames
})
]
})
export class EntityStoreModule {}
Your component accesses each entity data through an EntityCollectionService
which you can acquire from the ngrx_data EntityServices
.
In the following example,
the HeroesComponent
injects EntityServices
and asks it for an EntityCollectionService
registered under the Hero
entity name.
The component uses that service to read and save Hero entity data in a reactive, immutable style, without reference to any of the ngrx artifacts.
import { EntityCollectionService, EntityServices } from 'ngrx-data';
import { Hero } from '../../core';
@Component({
selector: 'app-heroes',
templateUrl: './heroes.component.html',
changeDetection: ChangeDetectionStrategy.OnPush
})
export class HeroesComponent implements OnInit {
heroes$: Observable<Hero[]>;
heroesService: EntityCollectionService<Hero>;
constructor(entityServices: EntityServices) {
this.heroesService = entityServices.getEntityCollectionService('Hero');
this.heroes$ = this.heroesService.entities$;
}
ngOnInit() {
this.getHeroes();
}
getHeroes() {
this.heroesService.getAll();
}
addHero(hero: Hero) {
this.heroesService.add(hero);
}
deleteHero(hero: Hero) {
this.heroesService.delete(hero.id);
}
updateHero(hero: Hero) {
this.heroesService.update(hero);
}
}
As you explore ngrx-data and its documentation, you'll learn many extension points and customizations that tailor the developer experience to your application needs.
QuickStart
Try the Quick Start to experience NgRx and ngrx-data in your app.
<a id="explore"></a>
Explore this repository
This repository contains the ngrx-data source code and a demonstration application (the "demo app") that exercises many of the library features.
The key folders in this repository are:
- docs --> the docs for the library and the demo
- lib ---> the ngrx-data library source code that we publish to npm
- src/app ---> the demo app source
- server ---> a node server for remote data access
<a id="docs-list"></a>
Learn more in the docs
- Quick Start
- Architecture
- Entity Metadata
- Entity Collection
- Entity Collection Service
- Entity Services
- Entity DataService
- Entity Actions
- Entity Reducer
- Entity Change Tracker
- Saving multiple-entities at once
- Extension Points
- Limitations
- FAQ: Frequently Asked Questions
Install and run
The demo app is based on the Angular CLI. You may want to install the CLI globally if you have not already done so.
npm install -g @angular/cli
Then follow these steps:
-
Clone this repository
git clone https://github.com/johnpapa/angular-ngrx-data.git cd angular-ngrx-data
-
Install the npm packages
npm install
-
Build the
ngrx-data
librarynpm run build-setup
-
Serve the CLI-based demo app
ng serve -o
Refer to the troubleshooting section if you run into installation issues.
Run the library tests
The ngrx-data library ships with unit and E2E (end-to-end) tests to validate functionality and guard against regressions.
These tests also demonstrate features of the library that are not covered in the demo app. They're worth reading to discover more advanced techniques.
Run this CLI command to execute the unit tests for the library.
ng test
Run the sample app E2E (end-to-end) tests.
npm run e2e
We welcome PRs that add to the tests as well as those that fix bugs and documentation.
Be sure to run these tests before submitting a PR for review.
<a id="redux-dev-tools"></a>
Monitor the app with Redux DevTools
The demo app is configured for monitoring with the Redux DevTools.
Follow these instructions to install them in your browser and learn how to use them.
Debug the library in browser dev tools
When running tests, open the browser dev tools, go to the "Sources" tab, and look for the library files by name.
In chrome, type [Command-P] and letters of the file name.
When running the app (e.g., with ng serve
), the browser dev tools give you TWO choices for a given TypeScript source file, both claiming to be from .ts
.
The one you want for library and app files ends in /lib/src/file-name.ts
and /src/client/app/path/file-name.ts
respectively.
Hope to solve the two file problem.
Build the app against the source
The demo app is setup to build and run against the ngPackagr artifacts in dist/ngrx-data
,
the same artifacts delivered in the npm package.
Re-build the library
npm run build-lib
ornpm run build-setup
ornpm run build-all
to update these artifacts.
This approach, while safe, can be inconvenient when you're evolving the library code because
"Go to definition" takes you to the d.ts
files in dist/ngrx-data
rather than
the source files in lib/src
.
If you want to "Go to definition" to take you to the source files, make the following *temporary changes to the TypeScript configuration.
-
Replace the paths target in the root
tsconfig.json
so that the IDE (e.g., VS Code) looks forngrx-data
insrc/lib
."paths": { "ngrx-data": ["lib/src"] },
-
Replace that same setting in the config at
src/tsconfig.json
. -
Replace that same setting in
src/client/tsconfig.app.json
. Nowng build
referencessrc/lib
when it builds the demo app.
Remember to restore the
tsconfig
settings when you're done. Do not commit those changes!
Use a real database
The demo app queries and saves mock entity data to an in-memory database with the help of the Angular In-memory Web API.
The "Remote Data" toggle switch in the header switches to the remote database.
The app fails when you switch to the remote database.
Notice how the app detects errors and pops up a toast message with the failed ngrx
Action.type
.The error details are in the browser's console log.
You must first set up a database and launch a web api server that talks to it.
The src/server
folder has code for a local node web api server, configured for the demo app.
TODO: Explain how to build and run the server. Explain how to build and serve the mongo db
Bad/surplus npm scripts
We know there are a great many npm script commands in package.json
, many (most?) of which don't work.
They're on our list for future cleanup. Please don't create issues for them (although PRs that fix them are welcome).
<!-- >TODO: Fix the broken server-oriented commands in package.json ### Create a MongoDb 1. Create a [CosmosDB instance](https://docs.microsoft.com/azure/cosmos-db/tutorial-develop-mongodb-nodejs-part4?WT.mc_id=angularngrxdata-github-jopapa) ### Build and launch the node server 1. Build the Angular app and launch the node server ```bash ??? ``` 1. Open the browser to <http://localhost:3001> ### Docker * Install and run [Docker](https://www.docker.com/community-edition) #### Environment file Create an empty file named `.env` in the root of the app. We'll fill this in later. #### Docker Compose with Debugging Create the Docker image and run it locally. This commands uses `docker-compose` to build the image and run the container. This opens port `9229` for debugging. ```bash npm run docker-debug open http://localhost:3001 ``` Open VS Code, launch the `Docker: Attach to Node` debugging profile ### Optional Database ```bash NODE_ENV=development PORT=3001 PUBLICWEB=./publicweb COSMOSDB_ACCOUNT=your_cosmos_account COSMOSDB_DB=your_cosmos_db COSMOSDB_KEY=your_cosmos_key COSMOSDB_PORT=10255 ``` Out of the box you can run the demo with an in memory data service instead of a live database. If you wish to use a database, you can set up a local mongo server or a remote CosmosDB/MongoDB server in the cloud. 1. Configure Cosmos DB server settings Copy the contents from `.env.example` into `.env`. Replace the values with your specific configuration. Don't worry, this file is in the `.gitignore` so it won't get pushed to github. ```javascript NODE_ENV=development PORT=3001 PUBLICWEB=./publicweb COSMOSDB_ACCOUNT=your_cosmos_account COSMOSDB_DB=your_cosmos_db COSMOSDB_KEY=your_cosmos_key COSMOSDB_PORT=10255 ``` -->Troubleshooting
Installation
- If you are on Windows and run into this error during
npm install
: "snyk couldn't patch the specified vulnerabilities because gnu's patch is not available", refer to this issue for the fix. In short, yourGit
installation is not correct orC:\Program Files\Git\usr\bin
(typically) is not added to your system environment variable%PATH%
.