Endpoint Expiry Policy
By default, Reactive Data Client cache policy can be described as stale-while-revalidate. This means that when data is available it can avoid blocking the application by using the stale data. However, in the background it will still refresh the data if old enough.
Expiry status
Fresh
Data in this state is considered new enough that it doesn't need to fetch.
Stale
Data is still allowed to be shown, however Reactive Data Client might attempt to revalidate by fetching again.
useSuspense() considers fetching on mount as well as when its parameters change. In these cases it will fetch if the data is considered stale.
When using React Navigation, focus events also trigger fetches for stale data.
Invalid
Data should not be shown. Any components needing this data will trigger fetch and suspense. If no components care about this data no action will be taken.
Expiry Time
Endpoint.dataExpiryLength
Endpoint.dataExpiryLength sets how long (in miliseconds) it takes for data to transition from 'fresh' to 'stale' status. Try setting it to a very low number like '50' to make it becomes stale almost instantly; or a very large number to stay around for a long time.
Toggling between 'first' and 'second' changes the parameters. If the data is still considered fresh you will continue to see the old time without any refresh.
import { lastUpdated } from './api/lastUpdated'; const getUpdated = lastUpdated.extend({ dataExpiryLength: 10000 }); export default function TimePage({ id }) { const { updatedAt } = useSuspense(getUpdated, { id }); return ( <div> API time for {id}:{' '} <time> {DateTimeFormat('en-US', { timeStyle: 'long' }).format( updatedAt, )} </time> </div> ); }
@data-client/rest
Long cache lifetime
import {
RestEndpoint,
RestGenerics,
createResource,
} from '@data-client/rest';
// We can now use LongLivingEndpoint to create endpoints that will be cached for one hour
class LongLivingEndpoint<
O extends RestGenerics,
> extends RestEndpoint<O> {
dataExpiryLength = 60 * 60 * 1000; // one hour
}
const LongLivingResource = createResource({
path: '/:id',
Endpoint: LongLivingEndpoint,
});
Never retry on error
import {
RestEndpoint,
RestGenerics,
createResource,
} from '@data-client/rest';
// We can now use NoRetryEndpoint to create endpoints that will be cached for one hour
class NoRetryEndpoint<
O extends RestGenerics,
> extends RestEndpoint<O> {
errorExpiryLength = Infinity;
}
const NoRetryResource = createResource({
path: '/:id',
Endpoint: NoRetryEndpoint,
});
Endpoint.invalidIfStale
Endpoint.invalidIfStale eliminates the 'stale' status, making data that expires immediately be considered 'invalid'.
This is demonstrated by the component suspending once its data goes stale. If the data is still within the expiry time it just continues to display it.
import { lastUpdated } from './api/lastUpdated'; const getUpdated = lastUpdated.extend({ invalidIfStale: true, dataExpiryLength: 5000, }); export default function TimePage({ id }) { const { updatedAt } = useSuspense(getUpdated, { id }); return ( <div> API time for {id}:{' '} <time> {DateTimeFormat('en-US', { timeStyle: 'long' }).format( updatedAt, )} </time> </div> ); }
Force refresh
We sometimes want to fetch new data; while continuing to show the old (stale) data.
A specific endpoint
Controller.fetch can be used to trigger a fetch while still showing the previous data. This can be done even with 'fresh' data.
import { lastUpdated } from './api/lastUpdated'; function ShowTime() { const { updatedAt } = useSuspense(lastUpdated, { id: '1' }); const ctrl = useController(); return ( <div> <time> {DateTimeFormat('en-US', { timeStyle: 'long' }).format( updatedAt, )} </time>{' '} <button onClick={() => ctrl.fetch(lastUpdated, { id: '1' })}> Refresh </button> </div> ); } render(<ShowTime />);
Refresh visible endpoints
Controller.expireAll() sets all responses' expiry status matching testKey
to Stale.
import { AsyncBoundary } from '@data-client/react'; import { lastUpdated } from './api/lastUpdated'; import ShowTime from './ShowTime'; import Loading from './Loading'; function Demo() { const ctrl = useController(); return ( <div> <AsyncBoundary fallback={<Loading id="1" />}> <ShowTime id="1" /> </AsyncBoundary> <AsyncBoundary fallback={<Loading id="2" />}> <ShowTime id="2" /> </AsyncBoundary> <AsyncBoundary fallback={<Loading id="3" />}> <ShowTime id="3" /> </AsyncBoundary> <button onClick={() => ctrl.expireAll(lastUpdated)}> Expire All </button> <button onClick={() => ctrl.fetch(lastUpdated, { id: '1' })}> Force Refresh First </button> </div> ); } render(<Demo />);
Invalidate (re-suspend)
Both endpoints and entities can be targetted to be invalidated.
A specific endpoint
In this example we can see invalidating the endpoint shows the loading fallback since the data is not allowed to be displayed.
import { AsyncBoundary } from '@data-client/react'; import { lastUpdated } from './api/lastUpdated'; import ShowTime from './ShowTime'; import Loading from './Loading'; function Demo() { const ctrl = useController(); return ( <div> <AsyncBoundary fallback={<Loading id="1" />}> <ShowTime id="1" /> </AsyncBoundary> <AsyncBoundary fallback={<Loading id="2" />}> <ShowTime id="2" /> </AsyncBoundary> <AsyncBoundary fallback={<Loading id="3" />}> <ShowTime id="3" /> </AsyncBoundary> <button onClick={() => ctrl.invalidateAll(lastUpdated)}> Invalidate All </button> <button onClick={() => ctrl.invalidate(lastUpdated, { id: '1' })} > Invalidate First </button> </div> ); } render(<Demo />);
Any endpoint with an entity
Using the Invalidate schema allows us to invalidate any endpoint that includes that relies on that entity in their response. If the endpoint uses the entity in an Array, it will simply be removed from that Array.
import { useLoading } from '@data-client/hooks'; import { TimedEntity } from './api/lastUpdated'; import TimePage from './TimePage'; export const deleteLastUpdated = new RestEndpoint({ path: '/api/currentTime/:id', method: 'DELETE', schema: new schema.Invalidate(TimedEntity), }); function ShowTime() { const ctrl = useController(); const [handleDelete, loadingDelete] = useLoading( () => ctrl.fetch(deleteLastUpdated, { id: '1' }), [], ); return ( <div> <AsyncBoundary fallback={<div>loading...</div>}> <TimePage id="1" /> </AsyncBoundary> <div> Current Time: <CurrentTime /> </div> <button onClick={handleDelete}> {loadingDelete ? 'loading...' : 'Invalidate'} </button> <button onClick={() => ctrl.setResponse( deleteLastUpdated, { id: '1' }, { id: '1' }, ) } > Invalidate (without fetching DELETE) </button> </div> ); } render(<ShowTime />);
Controller.fetch() lets us update the server and store. We can use Controller.setResponse() for cases where we simply want to change the local store without updating the server.