Security News
GitHub Removes Malicious Pull Requests Targeting Open Source Repositories
GitHub removed 27 malicious pull requests attempting to inject harmful code across multiple open source repositories, in another round of low-effort attacks.
@shopify/react-hydrate
Advanced tools
@shopify/react-hydrate
Utilities for hydrating server-rendered React apps.
$ yarn add @shopify/react-hydrate
This library is intended to assist with "progressive hydration", a pattern where you fully render an application on the server, but wait to hydrate parts of it when it reaches the client. Typically, doing different work on the server and client would result in the server markup being thrown out by React’s initial reconciliation.
This library avoids that issue by rendering a wrapping div
around the content on the server, adding an ID to that element, and setting the dangerouslySetInnerHTML
prop on the client to the resulting server markup in order to avoid mismatches. Once you have done whatever work on the client to load the necessary components, this hardcoded markup is removed, allowing the React tree to take over.
There are two key pieces to making this work. First, your server must render a HydrationContext.Provider
element around your React tree. This element will provide a HydrationManager
to the tree, which manages the identifiers that map server markup to client markup.
import React from 'react';
import {render} from 'react-dom';
import {HydrationContext, HydrationManager} from '@shopify/react-hydrate';
import App from '../app';
export async function middleware(ctx, next) {
const hydrationManager = new HydrationManager();
ctx.body = render(
<HydrationContext.Provider value={hydrationManager}>
<App />
</HydrationContext.Provider>,
);
await next();
}
Note that if you use @shopify/react-effect
, you must reset the manager after each rendering pass. If you don’t, the identifiers will continue to increment during each pass, and will not match between client and server. You must also use a new HydrationManager
for every request to prevent identifiers leaking between different renders.
import React from 'react';
import {render} from '@shopify/react-html/server';
import {extract} from '@shopify/react-effect';
import {HydrationContext, HydrationManager} from '@shopify/react-hydrate';
import App from '../app';
export async function middleware(ctx, next) {
const hydrationManager = new HydrationManager();
const app = <App />;
await extract(app, {
decorate(element) {
return (
<HydrationContext.Provider value={hydrationManager}>
{element}
</HydrationContext.Provider>
);
},
afterEachPass() {
hydrationManager.reset();
},
});
ctx.body = render(
<HydrationContext.Provider value={hydrationManager}>
<App />
</HydrationContext.Provider>,
);
await next();
}
Once the server is in place, you can start to use the Hydrator
component. This component will do different things depending on its children:
div
with an identifier that can be matched on the client.div
with dangerouslySetInnerHTML
set to be the HTML of the original, server-rendered markup.Note: you probably don’t need to know the internals of how progressive hydration works, unless you’re really interested. This package will primarily be used by other tools that manage asynchronous component loading, such as
@shopify/react-async
.
import React, {useState, useEffect} from 'react';
import {Hydrator} from '@shopify/react-hydrate';
// This is a hypothetical component that knows how to load a component
// asynchronously, but can also potentially access it synchronously on the
// server. So, the server will immediately have access to the component and
// can render it for the initial page load, but the client will have to wait
// until it is loaded asynchronously. The Hydrator component stands in the middle
// to bridge the gap and prevent the server markup from being thrown away.
function MyComponent() {
const [ProgressivelyHydratedComponent, setComponent] = useState(() =>
tryToAccessModuleSynchronously(),
);
useEffect(() => {
let mounted = true;
(async () => {
const Component = await loadModuleAsynchronously();
if (mounted) {
setComponent(Component);
}
})();
return () => {
mounted = false;
};
}, []);
return ProgressivelyHydratedComponent ? (
<Hydrator>
<ProgressivelyHydratedComponent />
</Hydrator>
) : (
<Hydrator />
);
}
You can optionally pass an id
prop to Hydrator
, which will be used to prefix the identifier used to match server and client markup.
FAQs
Utilities for hydrating server-rendered React apps
The npm package @shopify/react-hydrate receives a total of 16,382 weekly downloads. As such, @shopify/react-hydrate popularity was classified as popular.
We found that @shopify/react-hydrate demonstrated a healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released less than a year ago. It has 0 open source maintainers collaborating on the project.
Did you know?
Socket for GitHub automatically highlights issues in each pull request and monitors the health of all your open source dependencies. Discover the contents of your packages and block harmful activity before you install or update your dependencies.
Security News
GitHub removed 27 malicious pull requests attempting to inject harmful code across multiple open source repositories, in another round of low-effort attacks.
Security News
RubyGems.org has added a new "maintainer" role that allows for publishing new versions of gems. This new permission type is aimed at improving security for gem owners and the service overall.
Security News
Node.js will be enforcing stricter semver-major PR policies a month before major releases to enhance stability and ensure reliable release candidates.