Awesome
Tg.Blazor.IndexedDB
This is a Blazor library for accessing IndexedDB and uses Jake Archibald's idb library for handling access to IndexedDB on the JavaScript side.
This version currently provides the following functionality:
- Open and upgrade an instance of IndexedDB, creating stores
- Add and update a record to/in a given store
- Delete a record from a store
- Retrieve all records from a given store
- Retrieve a record/or records from a store by index and value if the index exists
- Add a new store dynamically
- Works both with server-side Blazor and client-side Blazor
It does not, at the moment, support aggregate keys, searches using a range and some of the more obscure features of IndexedDB.
Using the library
- Install the Nuget package TG.Blazor.IndexedDB (
Install-Package TG.Blazor.IndexedDB -Version 1.5.0-preview
) - create a new instance of DbStore
- add one or more store definitions
- Add the following script reference to your Index.html after the blazor.webassembly.js reference:
<script src="_content/TG.Blazor.IndexedDB/indexedDb.Blazor.js"></script>
- Inject the created instance of IndexedDbManger into the component or page where you want to use it
The library provides a service extension to create a singleton instance of the DbStore.
Within the client application's startup.cs
file, add the following to the ConfigureServices
function.
services.AddIndexedDB(dbStore =>
{
dbStore.DbName = "TheFactory"; //example name
dbStore.Version = 1;
dbStore.Stores.Add(new StoreSchema
{
Name = "Employees",
PrimaryKey = new IndexSpec { Name = "id", KeyPath = "id", Auto = true },
Indexes = new List<IndexSpec>
{
new IndexSpec{Name="firstName", KeyPath = "firstName", Auto=false},
new IndexSpec{Name="lastName", KeyPath = "lastName", Auto=false}
}
});
dbStore.Stores.Add(new StoreSchema
{
Name = "Outbox",
PrimaryKey = new IndexSpec { Auto = true }
}
);
});
A breakdown of what this does
Step 1 - define the database
To define the database we need to first give it a name and set its version. IndexedDB uses the version to determine whether it needs to update the database. For example if you decide to add a new store then increment the version to ensure that the store is added to the database.
Step 2 - Add a store(table) to the database
In IndexedDB a store is equivalent to table. To create a store we create a new StoreSchema
and add it to the collection of stores.
Within the StoreSchema
we define the name of the store, the primary index key and optionally a set of foreign key indexes if required.
The IndexSpec
is used to define the primary key and any foreign keys that are required. It has the following properties:
- Name - the name of the index
- KeyPath - the identifier for the property in the saved object/record that is to be indexed
- Unique - defines whether the key value must be unique
- Auto - determines whether the index value should be generated by IndexedDB.
In the example above for the "Employees" store the primary key is explicitly set to the keypath "id" and we want it automatically generated by IndexedDB. In the "Outbox" store the primary key just has Auto = true
set. IndexedDB is left to handle the rest.
Using IndexedDBManager
For the following examples we are going to assume that we have Person class which is defined as follows:
public class Person
{
public long? Id { get; set; }
public string FirstName { get; set; }
public string LastName { get; set; }
}
And the data store name is "Employees"
Accessing IndexedDBManager
To use IndexedDB in a component or page first inject the IndexedDbManager instance.
@inject IndexedDBManager DbManager
Setting up notifications
IndexedDBManager exposes ActionCompleted
event that is raised when an action is completed.
If you want to receive notifications in the ```OnInit()`` function subscribe to the event.
The function that handles the event should have the following signature:
private void OnIndexedDbNotification(object sender, IndexedDBNotificationArgs args)
{
Message = args.Message;
}
It is recommended that your page or component should also implement IDisposable to unsubscribe from the event.
Adding a record to an IndexedDb store
Assuming we have a new instance of our sample Person
class, to add to the "Employees" store doing the following:
var newRecord = new StoreRecord<Person>
{
Storename ="Employees",
Data = NewPerson
};
await DbManager.AddRecord(newRecord);
Getting all records from a store
var results = await DbManager.GetRecords<Person>("Employees");
Get record by Id
To get a record using the id can be done as follows:
CurrentPerson = await DbManager.GetRecordById<long, Person>(DbManager.Stores[0].Name, id);
getting a record using the index
To search for a value on an index first create an instance of StoreIndexQuery<TInput>
providing the name of the store to search in, the index to search on and the value to search for.
var indexSearch = new StoreIndexQuery<string>
{
Storename = DbManager.Stores[0].Name,
IndexName = SelectedIndex,
QueryValue = SearchString,
};
The StoreIndexQuery is then passed to the function IndexedDbManager.GetRecordByIndex<TInput, TResult>()
where TInput is the type of the value to search for and TRresult is the type of the return value.
var result = await DbManager.GetRecordByIndex<string, Person>(indexSearch);
if (result is null)
{
return;
}
People.Add(result);
By default IndexedDB only returns the first record found that matches the query. If you want to get all of the records that match the query value use the following:
var result = await DbManager.GetAllRecordsByIndex<string, Person>(indexSearch);
if (result is null)
{
return;
}
People.AddRange(result);
Updating a record
To update a record call IndexedDbManager.UpdateRecord<T>(StoreRecord<T> recordToUpdate)
.
Deleting a record
To delete a record call IndexedDbManager.DeleteRecord<TInput>(string storeName, TInput id)
.
Clear all records from a store
To clear all the records in a store call the following function IndexedDbManager.ClearStore(string storeName)
.
Deleting a Database
If you are so inclined you can delete an entire database with the following function IndexedDbManager.DeleteDb(string dbName)
.
Adding a new store dynamically
If you have occasion to what to add a store when the program is up and running. The following
var newStoreSchema = new StoreSchema
{
Name = NewStoreName,
PrimaryKey = new IndexSpec { Name = "id", KeyPath = "id", Auto = true },
};
await DbManager.AddNewStore(newStoreSchema);
What this will do is, if the store doesn't already exist, is increment the database version number and add the store to the database.
Change Logs
2020-01-08
- Major refactor to properly support inclusion of the Javascript file from the library as a static asset. Rewrote as a Razor library and consolidated the Javascript project into the main library project.
- Now supports both client and server-side Blazor projects.
2019-12-30
- Change when setting up primary index to use keyPath property rather than name (thanks Fabian Fleischer)
2019-10-07
- Updated to .NET Core 3.0 (thanks Tony Hild)
2019-09-13
-
Updated to Blazor 3.0.0 preview 9 (thanks Edgars Šults)
-
Updated the JavaScript interop class to use new the approach for static content (thanks dieterdp)
2019-08-21
- Updated to Blazor 3.0.0 preview 8
2019-08-15
- Updated to Blazor 3.0.0 preview 7.
- Added means to add a new store dynamically.
- Added function to get current version and store names of the underlying IndexedDB.
- Minor changes.
2019-06-25
- Upgraded to Blazor 3.0.0 preview 6.
2019-04-21
- Upgraded to Blazor 0.9.0-preview3-19154-02 (thanks Behnam Emamian).