Allows dynamically injecting reducers into a redux store at runtime. Compatible with HMR (Hot Module Replacement/Hot Reload) and SSR (Server Side Rendering).
Based on the work of randallknutson/redux-injector.
Typically when creating a redux data store, all reducers are combined and then passed to the createStore
function. However, this doesn't allow adding additional reducers later which can be lazy loaded or added by plugin modules. This module changes the creation of the redux store to pass in an object of reducer functions (recursively!) that are then dynamically combined. Adding a new reducer is then done with injectReducer
at any time.
Install redux-reducers-injector
via npm or yarn.
npm install --save redux-reducers-injector
or
yarn add redux-reducers-injector
Then with a module bundler like webpack that supports either CommonJS or ES2015 modules, use as you would anything else:
// using an ES6 transpiler, like babel
import { createInjectStore } from 'redux-reducers-injector';
// not using an ES6 transpiler
var createInjectStore = require('redux-reducers-injector').createInjectStore;
There are two parts for using reducer injection.
Typically reducers are combined using combineReducers
up a tree to a single reducer function that is then passed to the createStore function. DO NOT DO THIS! Instead, create the exact same object tree but without combine reducers. For example:
let reducersObject = {
router: routerReducerFunction,
data: {
user: userReducerFunction,
auth: {
loggedIn: loggedInReducerFunction,
loggedOut: loggedOutReducerFunction
},
info: infoReducerFunction
}
};
If you do have combined reducers it is still possible to pass them to createInjectReducers but you cannot then inject into any previously combined reducers.
Pass the uncombined reducer tree to createInjectStore
along with any other arguments you would usually pass to createStore
. This wraps and passes the arguments and results to createStore
.
import { createInjectStore } from 'redux-reducers-injector';
let store = createInjectStore(
reducersObject,
initialState
);
For any store created using react-reducers-injector, simply use injectReducer
to add a new reducer.
import { injectReducer } from 'redux-reducers-injector';
injectReducer('date.form', formReducerFunction);
The injector uses lodash.set so any paths that are supported by it can be used and any missing object will be created.
You can pass an extra parameter force
to true for forcing the reinjection of the reducer.
And a one last parameter store
for defining a context store, useful in SSR environment for supporting concurrent call.
You can add multiple reducers at once:
import {injectReducerBulk} from 'redux-reducers-injector';
const reducers = [
{key: 'date.form', reducer: formReducerFunction},
{key: 'foo.bar', reducer: BarReducerFunction},
];
injectReducerBulk(reducers);
For HMR purpose, it is possible to reload a reducer with reloadReducer
:
import { reloadReducer } from 'redux-reducers-injector';
if (module.hot) {
module.hot.accept('./reducer', () => {
const formReducerFunction = require('./reducer').default;
reloadReducer('date.form', formReducerFunction)
// same as:
// injectReducer('date.form', formReducerFunction, true);
});
}
If you use Server Side Rendering for your project, you will have a node server. The implementation of this project use a reference to the store in its scope.
When you receive multiple calls simultaneously (concurrent calls) and you render your react application, this reference to the store can be overwritten leading to javascript errors. Typically, the injected reducers won't be found.
Fortunately, you can pass your context store to the reloadReducer
, injectReducer
and injectReducerBulk
methods for solving this issue.
Example, if you are using the excellent react-universal-component library, you just have to write:
import universal from 'react-universal-component';
import {injectReducer} from 'redux-reducers-injector';
const MyComponent = universal(import(`./my_component`), {
onLoad: (module, info, props, context) => {
injectReducer('my-reducer-key', module.reducer, false, context.store);
},
});
You now have a bulletproof store injection 🚀
From [email protected]
, there is a huge breaking change regarding the context store.
After injecting the reducer, it will not be reflected in the mapStateToProps
method of the connect
method from redux.
You need to decorate your connected component for explicitly updating the context store with the new injected reducer.
For this, you can use this HOC:
import React, {Component} from 'react';
import {ReactReduxContext} from 'react-redux';
export default function withInjectedReducers(WrappedComponent) {
class WithInjectedReducers extends Component {
constructor(...args) {
super(...args);
this.firstRender = true;
}
render() {
if (this.firstRender) {
this.firstRender = false;
return (
<ReactReduxContext.Consumer>
{reduxContext => (
<ReactReduxContext.Provider
value={{
...reduxContext,
storeState: reduxContext.store.getState(),
}}
>
<WrappedComponent {...this.props} />
</ReactReduxContext.Provider>
)}
</ReactReduxContext.Consumer>
);
}
return <WrappedComponent {...this.props} />;
}
}
return WithInjectedReducers;
}
Use it like:
import React from 'react';
import {connect} from 'redux';
import withInjectedReducers from './withInjectedReducers';
export reducer from './myReducerToInjectDynamically';
const MyComponent = () => {
const {title} = this.props;
return <h1>{title}</h1>;
}
const mapStateToProps = state => {
return {
title: state.injectedReducer.title
};
};
export default withInjectedReducers(connect(mapStateToProps)(MyComponent));
This piece of code is not included in this project as it uses react
and react-redux
dependencies.
Feel free to use it.
If you are using redux-reducers-injector
with react-universal-component
, the onLoad
method will no more populate the context as the fourth parameter.
As explained above the context store is needed for avoiding issues in an SSR environment with concurrent calls.
You need to pass the context yourself:
import React, {Component} from 'react';
import universal from 'react-universal-component';
import {injectReducer} from 'redux-reducers-injector';
import {ReactReduxContext} from 'react-redux';
class Universal extends Component {
render() {
const U = universal(import('./myComponent'), {
onLoad: (module, info, {reduxcontext}) => {
if (reduxcontext && reduxcontext.store) {
injectReducer('injectedReducer', module.reducer, false, reduxcontext.store);
}
},
});
return (
<ReactReduxContext.Consumer>
{reduxContext => <U reduxcontext={reduxContext} />}
</ReactReduxContext.Consumer>);
}
}
export default Universal;
And if you have react-hot-loader
installed or another HMR library, you need to add a little more abstraction:
import React, {Component} from 'react';
import universal from 'react-universal-component';
import {injectReducer} from 'redux-reducers-injector';
import {ReactReduxContext} from 'react-redux';
class Universal extends Component {
constructor(props) {
super(props);
this.firstRender = true;
}
render() {
const U = universal(import(`./myComponent`), {
onLoad: (module, info, {reduxcontext}) => {
if (reduxcontext && reduxcontext.store) {
injectReducer('injectedReducer', module.reducer, false, reduxcontext.store);
}
},
});
if (this.firstRender) {
this.firstRender = false;
return (
<ReactReduxContext.Consumer>
{reduxContext => <U reduxcontext={reduxContext} />}
</ReactReduxContext.Consumer>);
}
return <U />;
}
}
export default Universal;
You are now ready to support [email protected]
with the new Context API.
React Reducer Injector by default uses combineReducers
from redux. However, if you are using immutable.js for your states, you need to use combineReducers
from redux-immutable
. To do this, pass in an override at the end of the arguments with the combineReducers
function.
import { createInjectStore } from 'redux-reducers-injector';
import { combineReducers } from 'redux-immutable';
let store = createInjectStore(
reducersObject,
initialState,
{ combineReducers }
);