Cached Resource
An AngularJS module to interact with RESTful server-side data
sources, even when the browser is offline. Uses HTML5
localStorage under the hood. Closely mimics the behavior of
the core ngResource module, which it requires as a dependency.
Features
- Provides a simple abstraction to retrieve and save objects from a RESTful
server.
- Comes with a set of intelligent defaults that let you get started right away.
- Caches all requests, and returns them immediately from the cache if you
request them again.
- Remmebers writes to the server, and adds them to the cache too.
- If a write fails, try it again periodically until it succeeds. (This even
works if you refresh the page in between!)
- If you query for multiple resources in one request, each one is cached
separately so you can request it from the cache individually, too.
- Works as a drop-in replacement for Angular's $resource module.
News
It looks like this sort of functionality might be built into the upcoming Angular 2.0.
Check out the design document here.
A simple example
angular.module('myApp', ['ngCachedResource']);
var Article = $cachedResource('article', '/articles/:id', {id: "@id"});
var a1 = Article.get({id: 1});
a1.$promise.then(function() {
console.log('From cache:', a1);
});
a1.$httpPromise.then(function() {
console.log('From server:', a1);
});
var a2 = new Article({id: 2});
a2.title = "This article will be saved eventually...";
a2.body = "Even if the browser is offline right now.";
a2.$save();
a2.$promise.then(function() {
console.log('Article was successfully saved.');
});
Read the tutorial on the Bites from Good Eggs
blog.
*Note: Internally, $cachedResource keeps track of writes by bound params to ensure that it doesn't duplicate writes. If your bound param is null (say you're relying on the server to generate id
s), then every write will replace the previous one. To avoid this undesirable scenario, simply ensure the id
is set on the client, and you can safely ignore it on the server.
Installing
Bower:
bower install angular-cached-resource
npm: (intended for use with browserify)
npm install angular-cached-resource
Manual Download:
Usage
Provides a factory called $cachedResource
:
$cachedResource(cacheKey, url, [paramDefaults], [actions]);
Arguments
-
cacheKey, String
An arbitrary key that will uniquely represent this resource in localStorage.
When the resource is instanciated, it will check localStorage for any
-
url, String
Exactly matches the API for the url
param of the $resource
factory.
-
paramDefaults, Object
, (optional)
Exactly matches the API for the paramDefaults
param of the
$resource factory.
-
actions, Object
, optional
Mostly matches the API for the actions
param of the
$resource factory. Takes an additonal cache
param (Boolean,
default true
) that determines if this action uses caching.
Returns
A CachedResource "class" object. This is a swap-in replacement for an object
created by the $resource
factory, with the following additional properties:
In addition, the following properties exist on CachedResource "instance" objects:
-
resource.$promise
For GET requests, if anything was already in the cache, this
promise is immediately resolved (still asynchronously!) even as the HTTP request
continues. Otherwise, this promise is resolved when the HTTP request responds.
-
resource.$httpPromise
For all requests, this promise is resolved as soon as the
corresponding HTTP request responds.
Clearing the cache
Since there is a 5 megabyte limit on localStorage in most browsers, you'll
probably want to actively manage the resource instances that are stored. By
default, this module never removes cache entries, so you'll have to do this by
hand. Here are the ways that you can accomplish this:
-
localStorage.clear()
Removes everything in localStorage. This will not break the behavior of
this module, except that it will prevent any pending write from actually
occurring.
-
$cachedResource.clearCache()
Removes every single Angular Cached Resource cache entry that's currently
stored in localStorage. It will leave all cache entries that were not created
by this module. (Note: cache entries are namespaced, so if you add anything
to localStorage with a key that begins with cachedResource://
, it will get
deleted by this call). It will also leave any resource instances that have a
pending write to the server.
-
$cachedResource.clearUndefined()
Removes every Angular Cached Resource cache entry corresponding to a resource
that has not been defined since the page was loaded. This is useful if your
API changes and you want to make sure that old entries are cleared away.
-
$cachedResource.clearCache({exceptFor: ['foo', 'bar']})
Removes every Angular Cached Resource entry except for resources with the
foo
or bar
keys, or resource instances that have a pending write to the
server.
-
$cachedResource.clearCache({clearPendingWrites: true})
Removes every Angular Cached Resource entry, including those that have a
pending write to the server.
If you have a "class" object that you've created with $cachedResource
, then
you can also do the following:
-
CachedResource.$clearCache()
Removes all entries from the cache associated with this particular resource
class, except for resource instances that have a pending write to the server.
-
CachedResource.$clearCache({where: [{id: 1}, {id: 2}])
Removes two entries from the cache associated with this particular resource
class; the ones with an id
of 1 and 2. (This assumes that paramDefaults
has an id
param.)
-
CachedResource.$clearCache({exceptFor: {id: 1})
Removes all entries from the cache associated with this particular resource
class, except for those with an id
of 1. (This assumes that
paramDefaults
has an id
param.)
-
CachedResource.$clearCache({exceptFor: {query: 'search string'}, isArray: true})
Removes all entries from the cache except those that were returned by the
provided query parameters.
-
CachedResource.$clearCache({clearPendingWrites: true})
Removes all instances of CachedResource from the cache, including those that
have a pending write to the server.
Details
Asking for a cached resource with get
or query
will do the following:
-
If the request has not been made previously, it will immediately return a
resource
object, just like usual. The request will go through to the
server, and when the server responds, the resource will be saved in a
localStorage cache.
-
If the request has already been made, it will immediately return a
resource
object that is pre-populated from the cache. The request will
still attempt to go through to the server, and if the server responds, the
cache entry will be updated.
Updating a CachedResource object will do the following:
- Add the resource update action to a queue.
- Immediately attempt to flush the queue by sending all the network requests
in the queue.
- If a queued network request succeeds, remove it from the queue and resolve
the promises on the associated resources (only if the queue entry was made
after the page was loaded)
- If the queue contains requests, attempt to flush it once per minute OR
whenever the browser sends a navigator.onOnline event.
What if localStorage doesn't exist, or if the browser is out of space?
In either of these cases, $cachedResource
will make sure all of your requests
still happen. Things end up working just like the $resource
module, with
none of the caching benefits.
Development
Please make sure you run the tests, and add to them unless it's a trivial
change. Here is how you can run the tests:
npm install
npm test
License
MIT