Angular service & directive for https://github.com/mozilla/localForage (Offline storage, improved.)
This angularJS module is a rewrite of angular-local-storage by grevory and angularLocalStorage by agrublev using the excellent Mozilla library localForage
-
Store your data in the best available storage solution that your browser can offer (IndexedDB / WebSQL or localstorage as a fallback)
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All browsers are supported starting at IE8. For the full list check: IndexedDB support, WebSQL support and localstorage support
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Everything is async and uses promises
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Use the service or the directive
- Download the project or install via bower
bower install angular-localforage
or npmnpm install angular-localforage
- Download localForage https://github.com/mozilla/localForage
- Put localforage.js and angular-localForage.js into you project
<script src="path/to/localforage.js"></script>
<script src="path/to/angular-localForage.js"></script>
- Add the module
LocalForageModule
to your application
angular.module('yourModule', ['LocalForageModule']);
- (optional) Configure the
$localForageProvider
. See below for details. - Use the
$localForage
service or thelocal-forage
directive
angular.module('yourModule', ['LocalForageModule'])
.controller('yourCtrl', ['$scope', '$localForage', function($scope, $localForage) {
$localForage.setItem('myName','Olivier Combe').then(function() {
$localForage.getItem('myName').then(function(data) {
var myName = data;
});
});
}]);
<input local-forage="{key: 'autoStoredKey', name: 'myApp', scopeKey: 'myObj.myVar', defaultValue: 'this is the default value'}" ng-model="myObj.myVar" placeholder="This will be auto stored">
-
setDriver(driver)
: you can force the driver to use, check the localForage documentation for more information -
driver()
: returns the current localForage driver (sync) -
setItem(key/Array<key>, value/Array<value>)
: stores data (async, promise) -
getItem(key/Array<key>)
: retrieves stored data (async, promise) -
removeItem(key/Array<key>)
: removes stored data (async, promise) -
pull(key/Array<key>)
: removes stored data and returns it (it's like doing getItem followed by removeItem) (async, promise) -
clear()
: removed all stored data for your application based on the app prefix (async, promise) -
key(n)
: retrieves the key at n position in storage. It doesn't take the prefix into account if you use localStorage (async, promise) -
keys()
: returns all the keys used for storage in your application (async, promise) -
length()
: returns the number of items stored (async, promise) -
iterate(iteratorCallback)
: Iterate over all value/key pairs in datastore. (async, promise)
Iterate supports early exit by returning non undefined
value inside iteratorCallback
callback.
Resulting value will be passed to the promise as the result of iteration.
You can use this to make a search in your data:
$localForage.iterate(function(value, key) {
if(angular.isInt(value) && value > 10) {
return key;
}
}).then(function(data) {
// data is the key of the value > 10
});
bind($scope, key/params object)
: lets you directly bind a LocalForage value to a $scope variable (async, promise)
$localForage.bind($scope, 'myStorageKey');
$localForage.bind($scope, {
key: 'myStorageKey', // required
defaultValue: {test: 'my test'}, // a default value
scopeKey: 'myObj.myVar', // the name of the scope key (if you want it to be different from key)
name: 'myApp' // instance name
});
unbind($scope, key[, scopeKey])
: lets you unbind a variable from localForage while removing the value from both the scope and the storage (async, promise)
You can directly bind a scope value from within your html. With the local-forage
directive, you can either use just the key parameter:
<input local-forage="autoStoredKey" ng-model="autoStoredKey" placeholder="This will be auto stored">
Or give an object parameter:
<input local-forage="{key: 'autoStoredKey', name: 'myApp', scopeKey: 'myObj.myVar', defaultValue: 'this is the default value'}" ng-model="myObj.myVar" placeholder="This will be auto stored">
key
is the only required parameter. The other options are:
name
: if you want to store your values in a specific instance (See below for more info on multiple instances)scopeKey
: if you want to store the value in the scope under a different key from the one in storage. You can for example use a specific key of an object by usingmyObj.myVar
defaultValue
: if you want to define a ...default value
You can configure the $localForageProvider
. Any parameter that you set here will be the default for any new localforage instance.
You can for example set your own prefix for storage (by default lf
is used).
angular.module('yourModule', ['LocalForageModule'])
.config(['$localForageProvider', function($localForageProvider){
$localForageProvider.config({
driver : 'localStorageWrapper', // if you want to force a driver
name : 'myApp', // name of the database and prefix for your data, it is "lf" by default
version : 1.0, // version of the database, you shouldn't have to use this
storeName : 'keyvaluepairs', // name of the table
description : 'some description'
});
}]);
You can also choose to be notified by broadcast on set and remove.
angular.module('yourModule', ['LocalForageModule'])
.config(['$localForageProvider', function($localForageProvider){
$localForageProvider.setNotify(true, true); // itemSet, itemRemove
}]);
The broadcast are the following :
$rootScope.$broadcast('LocalForageModule.setItem', {key: key, newvalue: value, driver: localforage.driver});
$rootScope.$broadcast('LocalForageModule.removeItem', {key: key, driver: localforage.driver});
You can use multiple instances of localForage at the same time. To create a new instance, call createInstance
with a config object (sync):
var lf2 = $localForage.createInstance({
name: '2nd',
driver: 'localStorageWrapper'
});
The parameters will inherit the default parameters that you might have configured in the config phase of your application (See above for details), but the new config object will overwrite them.
It means that you can have one instance using localStorage, and one instance using indexedDB/WebSQL, at the same time !
The instance will take the name that you will define in the config object. You can get an instance previously created by using the instance
method:
var lf2 = $localForage.instance('2nd');
The instance
method will return the default instance if you don't give a name parameter.
Download the required libs :
npm install
Then start the tests with :
npm test
It will launch Chrome and Firefox, edit karma.conf.js if you want to change something. We could use more tests, see "contributing" below.
##Contributing
I would love to have community contributions and support! A few areas where could use help right now:
- Writing tests
- Elaborating on documentation
- Creating examples for the docs
- Bug reports and/or fixes
If you want to contribute, please submit a pull request, or contact olivier.combe@gmail.com for more information.
The commits messages need to be validated. Use the following commands to add a git hook that will check if you follow the convention :
cd <angular-localForage-repo>
ln -s ../../validate-commit-msg.js .git/hooks/commit-msg
When you commit your messages, follow this convention :
<type>: <subject> <BLANK LINE> <optional message>
For example:
feat: Added validation commit msg file
Installation:
* cd <angular-localForage-repo>
* ln -s ../../validate-commit-msg.js .git/hooks/commit-msg
The following types are accepted in the commit messages:
- feat
- fix
- docs
- style
- refactor
- perf
- test
- chore
- revert
But only feat/fix/docs/perf will be in the changelog.
If you do a breaking change, add an explanation preceded by BREAKING CHANGE:
. For example:
fix: remove deprecated promise unwrapping
BREAKING CHANGE: promise unwrapping has been removed.
It can no longer be turned on.
If you want to reference an issue, you can add a new line with either Closes
or Fixes
followed by the issue number. For example:
feat: Added changelog auto generation
Usage: gulp changelog
Fixes #62
You can fix / close multiple issue with one commit, just add a new line for each.